Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

‘Batting’ for local manufactur­ing units

- Kushal Phatarpeka­r

BANGLADESH HAS SEVERAL CLUSTERS WHERE VILLAGES HAVE TAKEN TO BAT MANUFACTUR­ING AS A MEANS FOR SUSTENANCE.

MIRPUR: A walk through any sports goods shop in Dhaka usually means browsing through highend bats largely made in India. The bat-manufactur­ing industry here is still nascent. In terms of numbers, there are many local brands, but for profession­als, a bat made here is never in demand.

But, the industry is growing. A small yet persistent set of people is carrying on with its work in the rural sector of the country, many using it as a medium to overcome poverty. It’s a small-scale industry heavily dependent on micro loans from financial institutio­ns and assistance from NGOS.

One such cluster operates out of Jhenidah, located 250km from Dhaka. There, a local NGO that provides micro finance is the reason behind the start of what they claim is an ‘ever-growing’ business.

Hasan Arafat, programme coordinato­r RHECO (Rural Health Education and Credit Organisati­on) that facilitate­s micro loans in various sectors, says the first manufactur­ing model was executed five years ago.

“A man came to us and said he wanted funding to buy machinery to carve wood for a small bat-manufactur­ing unit,” says Arafat. “Today, nearly half the village of Shalkupa in the Jhenidah region depends on the business. Bats manufactur­ed here go to all parts of the country, including Dhaka,” adds Arafat.

Like RHECO, other NGOS have begun handing out loans to people willing to take the plunge into bat-making. Following the spurt in interest, Bangladesh’s leading non-government organisati­on, BRAC has also decided to facilitate loans for would-be bat manufactur­ers in the rural belt.

Other than the cluster in Jhenidah, others exist in other regions such as Baldia, Pirojpur, Jessore, Rupsha and Khulna. Unlike in India, where the business of manufactur­ing bats and stumps has centered in towns of Jalandar and Meerut, in Bangladesh, these units are located in remote locations.

These villages are located in areas where timber --- Shisha Kat and Jibon --- is found in abundance. In all Bangladesh has several clusters where villages have taken to bat manufactur­ing as a means for sustenance.

But despite the affordabil­ity, these bats remain for casual play and not for profession­al cricketers. Almost all internatio­nal cricketers in Bangladesh are paid by Indian bat manufactur­ers to use their bats. For lack of reliabilit­y in Bangladesh, these cricketers invariably depend on Indian goods, or import bats from UK.

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