| EMS Security Stamp and
Counterfeit Havana Cigars |
| Conscious of this growing threat Hunters
& Frankau, Habanos S.A's official UK Havana importers,
introduced a special security stamp as long ago as 1993. Bearing the symbol of a
lion on top of the letters EMS, which stand for English Market Selection, a
description used in Cuba for over a century to identify the quality of cigars
designated for the British market. It is the cornerstone of the UK's long
established reputation as the world centre for the finest Havana cigars. Each
Stamp is individually numbered so that the history of every box can be traced.
Since 1997, the stamp's colour has been changed annually in the autumn as a
further move to outwit the counterfeiters. |
 |
Remember, wherever you buy your cigars
look for the security stamp unless you want to risk the disappointment
experienced by Clive James in his recent documentary. He bought a box of
Montecristos off the street in Havana. The price was very competitive but the
cigars were fakes and went straight into the bin.
Click
here to find out more about buying
tobacco over the Internet from H.M.Customs and Excise.
One of the basic
rules of Roman law was caveat emptor - that is to say, let the buyer beware. For
more than thirty years there has been nothing easier than buying counterfeit
Rolex watches, Channel perfumes and Herm?s scarves. The latest sport in
counterfeiting and stealing from unsuspecting buyers is in the field of cigars,
many producers in the Dominican Republic now specialising in producing cigars
that they call Cohibas but that have nothing in common whatever with the superb
cigars of that brand name from Cuba. As has been pointed out on the Internet and
in many magazines, phony Cohiba cigars can be found almost everywhere, and
without actually smoking them it is becoming increasingly difficult to
identify the fakes.

First, it is important to know that
genuine Cohibas come in two series - the Classic line that include their
Lancero, Coronas Especial and Robusto cigars and the Silgo series of Siglo I,
II, III, IV and V. Both styles are available in boxes made of cedar wood, and
all of the genuine Cohiba boxes contain 25 cigars. If you should find a box of
Cohibas sold in white, paper wrapped boxes avoid them, for even though genuine
Cohibas were wrapped that way 15 years ago, the Cuban company no longer uses
such wrappings. When checking the boxes, be sure first of all that it contains a
Habanos tax seal and that the seal has been perfectly set at a 45 degree angle.
While Cuban bureaucrats are meticulous about this, the counterfeiters are
careless.
Be aware that Lancero and Coronos Especial cigars are also
available in orange and blue printed cardboard cartons. Inside each carton are 5
cigars, each of which is in its own individual box an individually wrapped
in cellophane. Check each individual box and make sure that the Cohiba name
is printed near the top of the box and that the name is printed without
error some counterfeiters are not very careful with their spelling. Some even
print the label upside down. Even more important, open the individual box of
the cigars and you will notice that the cellophane of genuine Cohibas is
stained a light brown. These stains come from the oil in the leaf of tobacco
with which the cigar has been wrapped.

Only aged cigars leave such stains and all real Cohibas are
aged. Also note that the cellophane is only about 1 centimetres longer than
the cigar itself and that the cigars are perfectly wrapped. Some of the
counterfeits have cellophane wrappers that are from 2 - 4 cm. longer than
the cigars. Also note that the inside of each individual box is printed with the
word Cohiba. (Alas, the best fakes have this too).
The second major thing
to check is the label. Although some of the counterfeit labels are printed
perfectly, most are faulted and easy to spot. The main thing to look at are the
black and white squares on the label of the box and on the individual
cigars. The squares on real Cohibas are perfectly even and without fault, but
those on the counterfeits are often sloppily done and have rough
edges. Another important test is to look at the cap of the cigar. The men
who put on the tobacco that caps a genuine Cohiba are artists and the caps of
genuine Cohibas are without faults. The caps of the counterfeits are often
wrinkled, have a somewhat "off" colour and are sometimes not at all tight
fitting. As to flavour, aroma, and the pleasure of the cigar, there is a
problem, because if you are smoking a counterfeit you have probably
already paid for the box. Genuine Cohibas are extraordinarily rich, tend to
be full bodied, draw comfortably and have full flavours of tobacco, cedar wood,
chocolate, coffee, spices and herbs.
The counterfeits, on the other
hand, are mediocre cigars at best, tending to draw either too hard or too
easily, far too hot as they smoke, and lacking any finesse at all. The
counterfeits can be bought at remarkably reasonable prices. Alas, comparing them
to genuine Cohiba cigars is akin to comparing the wines of Romanee-Conti to
those made on the Greek island of Samos. If you have never tasted a Samos wine,
consider yourself fortunate.
Nor is it only Cohibas that are
counterfeited and in recent months the production of counterfeit Havana cigars
of a dozen or more Cuban brands has become so common that unless one buys from
only the most reliable dealers, there is an ever increasing risk of
spending a great deal of money for cigars that are virtually worthless. Perhaps
the very best way to reduce that risk is to become familiar with both genuine
and counterfeit wrappers that are used, and there is no better way to do that
than by viewing the excellent photographic gallery of genuine and fake labels
presented by the American magazine, Cigar Aficionado. The gallery can be
viewed on the Internet at Cigar
Aficionado. Simply enter the site and you
will have direct access.