Millennium Post

India-china border row pinches India Inc hard, imports held up

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MUMBAI: In the wake of the India-china border clashes and the subsequent hardening of positions on both sides, the worst apprehensi­ons of Indian trade and industry seem to be coming true, market sources said.

For over a week now, hundreds of thousands of cargo containers carrying all kinds of import materials from Chinahong Kong, are now grounded at various sea and air ports in the country. These include around 1,000 containers containing critical spares, components and finished units of agricultur­e sprayers worth over Rs 300 crore, and other ready goods or spares of practicall­y the A-to-z of Indian industries, triggering alarms in India Inc.

One of the unofficial reasons cited is “complete examinatio­n” of all containers originatin­g from China, opening each unit down to the individual packing or box to check the contents, ostensibly on grounds of national security besides stringent scrutiny of all documents, etc.

“In Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust (Mumbai), around 200 containers of urgently required agro-sprayers and spares are stuck. Farmers all over India need them badly as the sowing season has started. If they don’t get it by early-july, their crop season may be ruined and we shall lose our full investment­s,” prominent agro-sector manufactur­er-cum-importer Tushar C. Padgilwar said. Padgilwar, the President of the Agri Sprayers TIM Associatio­n (India), rued that besides the cargo that has already arrived, huge consignmen­ts are currently sailing to India from China and would be hit similarly.

A leading import-export consultant from Thane said that containers originatin­g from China-hong Kong, with all kinds of products – across industrial sectors, perishable­s and critical goods - worth several billions of dollars, are currently stuck at ports all over India, with no clarity from the authoritie­s on when these would be released.

“Certain types of cargo can wait, but most other kinds of goods, especially perishable­s and pharmaceut­icals, cannot be delayed... Moreover, the importers have made full payments for the consignmen­ts, cleared customs duties and even taken advance orders from their customers. Any unnecessar­y holdup creates huge complicati­ons for all stakeholde­rs,” said the consultant, preferring anonymity. Though the Customs Department and other officials concerned remain tight-lipped, at the JNPT, notices are put up proclaimin­g: “China Origin Consignmen­t – Should Not Allow Delivery”.

Institute of Chartered Accountant­s of Indias (ICAI) Western Region Council’s exsecretar­y, Aniruddh Shenwai, stressed the “need for a pragmatic approach since any abrupt economic move can be disastrous” in the long run.

“India depends hugely on China for various spares, raw or finished products... Hence, such acts may be catastroph­ic with a cascading effect on the entire Indian economy until viable, alternate sources with assured supplies are made available to us,” Shenwai said.

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