India Imposes Port Curbs On Import Of Certain Bangladeshi Goods

The notification imposes "port restrictions on the import of certain goods such as readymade garments, processed food items etc., from Bangladesh to India," the ministry said.

Advertisement
Read Time: 4 mins
New Delhi:

The government on Saturday imposed port restrictions on the import of certain goods, such as readymade garments and processed food items, from Bangladesh, in response to similar curbs placed by Dhaka on certain Indian products last month.

According to a notification of the Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT), these port restrictions will not apply to Bangladeshi goods transiting through India but destined for Nepal and Bhutan, it added.

The notification imposes "port restrictions on the import of certain goods such as readymade garments, processed food items etc., from Bangladesh to India," the ministry said. The order said that readymade garments imports from Bangladesh will not be allowed from any land port. However, it is allowed only through Nhava Sheva and Kolkata seaports.

Advertisement

For fruits; fruit flavoured and carbonated drinks; processed food items (baked goods, snacks, chips and confectionary); cotton and cotton yarn waste; plastic and PVC finished goods, dyes, plasticisers and granules; and wooden furniture, the notification said the inbound shipments from the neighbouring country shall not be allowed through any LCSs (Land Customs Stations) and ICPs (Integrated Check Posts) in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura and Mizoram; and LCS Changrabandha and Fulbari, in West Bengal.

Advertisement

It also said that these port restrictions do not apply to the import of Fish, LPG, Edible Oil, and Crushed stone from Bangladesh.

Advertisement

To make these changes, a new paragraph is introduced in the country's import policy regulating the imports of these goods from Bangladesh to India, "with immediate effect," it said.

Advertisement

On April 9, 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. It was announced against the backdrop of the controversial statement made by the head of Bangladesh's interim government Muhammad Yunus in China recently that India's seven northeastern states, which share a nearly 1,600 km border with Bangladesh, are landlocked and have no way to reach the ocean except through his country.

The comments did not go down well in New Delhi. It also drew sharp reactions from political leaders in India across party lines.

Indian exporters, mainly from the apparel sector, had also earlier urged the government to withdraw this facility to the neighbouring country.

India-Bangladesh relations have nosedived dramatically after Yunus failed to contain attacks on minorities, especially Hindus, in that country.

Bangladesh is a big competitor of India in the textile sector. The India-Bangladesh trade stood at USD 12.9 billion in 2023-24.

According to official sources, India had previously permitted Bangladesh exports via all LCSs and ICP and seaports without undue restrictions. However, the neighbouring country imposed port curbs on Indian exports, particularly at LCSs and ICPs bordering northeast states.

On April 13 this year, yarn exports from India across landports were stopped and Indian shipments were subjected to rigorous inspections on entry.

"Further rice exports from India were not allowed through Benapole ICPs from April 15, adding to existing restrictions," the official said adding industrial growth in the northeastern states suffers a triple jeopardy due to the imposition of unreasonably high and economically unviable transit charges by Bangladesh.

Similarly, due to landport curbs by Bangladesh, the northeastern states suffer from a lack of access to the Bangladesh market to sell locally manufactured goods, restricting the market access to primary agri goods only.

The neighbouring country, on the other hand, has free access to the entire northeast market. The official also said that the list of goods in the notification will be reviewed periodically to ensure that fair and equitable growth is facilitated in the respective NE states.

Bangladesh has also recently imposed curbs on export of Indian yarn via land ports allowing Indian yarns only through seaports.

"It has been decided to reciprocate this measure by imposing port restrictions," the official, who does not wish to be named, said.

Bangladesh exports over USD 700 million worth of readymade garments annually to India. "Bangladesh can not cherry-pick terms of bilateral engagement solely to benefit itself or take India's market access for granted. India is willing to engage in discussion but it is Bangladesh's responsibility to create an environment free of rancour," the official said. 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Featured Video Of The Day
Narrow Escape For Helicopter Ambulance During Kedarnath Emergency Landing
Topics mentioned in this article