India bans import of certain jute from Bangladesh via land routes
However, imports are allowed only through Nhava Sheva seaport in Maharashtra.
PTI
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Photo: Wikipedia
New Delhi, 27 June
India on Friday
banned imports of certain jute products and woven fabrics from Bangladesh
through all land routes amid strained relations between the two countries.
However, imports are
allowed only through Nhava Sheva seaport in Maharashtra, the Directorate
General of Foreign Trade (DGFT) said in a notification.
The goods under these
curbs include jute products, flax tow and waste, jute and other bast fibres,
jute, single flax yarn, single yarn of jute, multiple folded, woven fabrics or
flex, and unbleached woven fabrics of jute.
Such port
restrictions will not apply to Bangladeshi goods transiting through India to
Nepal and Bhutan, it added.
It further said
re-exports of these products from Bangladesh to India through Nepal and Bhutan
will not be allowed.
"Import from
Bangladesh shall not be allowed from any land port on the India-Bangladesh
border. However, it is allowed only through Nhava Sheva seaport," the DGFT
said, adding that "imports of certain goods from Bangladesh to India are
regulated with immediate effect".
Earlier in April and
May, India announced similar curbs on imports from Bangladesh.
On 17 May, India
imposed port restrictions on the import of certain goods like readymade
garments and processed food items, from the neighbouring country.
On 9 April, India
withdrew the transhipment facility it had granted to Bangladesh for exporting
various items to the Middle East, Europe and various other countries except
Nepal and Bhutan.
These measures were
announced against the backdrop of the controversial statements made by the head
of Bangladesh's interim government Muhammad Yunus in China.
The comments did not
go down well in New Delhi. It also drew sharp reactions from political leaders
in India across party lines.
India-Bangladesh
relations have nosedived dramatically after Yunus failed to contain attacks on minorities, especially Hindus.
Bangladesh is a big
competitor of India in the textile sector. The India-Bangladesh trade stood at
USD 12.9 billion in 2023-24.
In 2024-25, India's
exports stood at USD 11.46 billion, while imports were USD 2 billion.
Bangladesh's
perceived growing proximity with Pakistan and China and the implications of
India's strained ties with its eastern neighbour were also discussed at a
parliamentary committee meeting on Friday, according to sources.
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