Imagine you are a regular customer who has no idea about the price in Europe and got sold an item that stopped working. In order to make it work again you need to pay customs.nuclearcat wroteThis model retail price is 210 Eur, he sold me for $200. He thought i am tourist and wont stay in country. So i guess, at least with me, he is fair.chosen2k wroteIf you have the invoice report the shop && send the "khidmat el moustahlek" up on his ass.nuclearcat wroteJust yesterday broke my phone and bought fast replacement at some road store. Guess what... you have 88 days to pay at Libanpost.
Wont argue, as he sold it under retail price even, i might just pay or use it for testing things, it was anyway quick replacement.
Most likely sellers like him is trying to get rid from "deadweight" phones that turned out imported illegally, and no one will compensate them costs of such mistake (sometimes they buy phones from some wholesale places, and such "importers" after new law just will disappear and leave such small shops with "deadweight" phones), and now is not the best of times for such small shops in the villages, to punish them.
If i will continue using this phone, i will pay jomrok by myself.
Additionally, don't think the small shops do not know where their phones are coming from and that big importers just disappear.
In the decree http://www.mpt.gov.lb/images/Minister_Decree/MIRS-Edit.pdf it is clearly mentioned that these shops should directly inform of their "tehrib" phones and pay the VAT.
I am not advocating that you should report this specific guy, however I highly suggest anyone else who gets placed in this situation to get khidmet el moustahlek to fight for them by reporting the seller.
Question: Did he specifically told you that the phone will stop working? Or did he keep his mouth shut? If its the latter, then no one is stopping him from doing the same thing to multiple customers.