April19 , 2026

    Wintrack halts India trade over bribery claims; Chennai Customs denies charge

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    Tamil Nadu-based Wintrack Inc. said it has ceased import-export activities in India, effective October 1, 2025, alleging harassment by Chennai Customs officials. The latter, however, has denied the allegations.

    According to the company’s website, Wintrack enables buyers to effortlessly shop from any China and Thailand e-commerce website and enjoy seamless doorstep delivery anywhere in India.

    In a statement on X, the company said: “After exposing their bribery practices twice this year, they retaliated, effectively crippling our operations and destroying our business in India. We deeply thank everyone who has supported us during these difficult times.”

    Responding to the allegation, Chennai Customs said the importer had an established pattern of false allegations and corruption charges.

    The controversy centres around eight undeclared boxes of USB cables built-in rechargeable batteries, which require a certificate from the Central Pollution Control Board.

    “Despite repeated queries on 29.08.2025, during personal hearing on 08.09.2025, and again on 29.09.2025, no EPR certificate was provided. Instead, the importer submitted wrong documentation (E-waste undertaking) and made legally untenable claims of MSME exemption, finished product exemption, and low battery capacity exemption—none of which exist under the Battery Waste Management Rules, 2022,” the central authority said in the tweet.

    The controversy snowballed as Prawin Ganeshan, founder of Wintrack Inc, also levelled allegations of bribery, naming specific officials from the Special Intelligence and Investigation Branch (SIIB) and claiming his wife’s company was forced to pay over Rs 2.1 lakh in bribes for a shipment worth $6,993. He alleged officers even offered a 10 per cent “discount” during negotiations.

    The war of words between the firm and the customs department also opened a Pandora’s box on social media, with Congress MP Shashi Tharoor calling it “truly dismaying”.

    Chairman of Aarin Capital and former CFO of Infosys Mohandas Pai tagged Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman and Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the thread, saying: “You have failed to stamp out systemic corruption in our ports Please act.”

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