Nathu La Pass on Sino-Indian border, which was reopened to trade
in early July after having closed for 44 years following a conflict
between the two nations, has been shut down again, but temporarily
this time, according to an agreement between China and India.
Local sources said, quite a number of business people have
chosen to stay behind at Tibet's Yadong, where the border trade
market is located, and to seize the winter in making a good
preparation for the start of the trading season, said an official
with Yadong County Government.
Latest statistics given by the Tibet Autonomous Regional Bureau
of Commerce shows that altogether 1.49 million yuan (US$186,250)
worth of imports and exports were done at the Renqinggang border
trade market in Yadong, Tibet, in the past 51 normal trading days
between July 6 and September30.
Commodities traded at the border trade market include gifts,
business tools, bedding silk, daily necessities, and zanba, a
Tibetan food made of roasted qingke barley flour, for export, and
rice, flour, candy and incense for import.
The fact that the meagre volume of border trade with the
Renqinggang market has fallen short of the expectations is largely
blamed on factors including restrictions placed on commodities for
import and export on the part of India, a lack of a unified
standards for commodity inspection and quarantine, a limited
trading time as a result of the special climate in the Himalayan
region, and bad infrastructure.
Reopening of the Nathu La Pass does boost tourism in Yadong.
Statistics provided by Yadong County Government says tourists made
7,000 visits to the county by September 28 and raked in 1.67
million yuan in revenue, up 53 percent from comparable figure for
2005.
Trade through the Nathu La Pass accounted for 80 percent of
total cross border trade between China and India in the early
1900s. But after their border conflict in 1962, the two countries
closed their customs check points at the former border markets and
the trade route became a tightly guarded frontier with barbed
wire.
Previously, more than 90 percent of trade between China and
India were shipped by sea instead, and via Tianjin -- a port city some 120 kilometers
from Beijing but nearly 4,400 kilometers from Lhasa.
On July 6, China and India reopened border trade through the
Nathu La Pass, which sits 4,545 meters above sea level and is
wedged between Yadong County in Tibet's Xigaze Prefecture and
India's Sikkim State.
With the reopening of the Nathu La Pass, it is only 1,200
kilometers by land from Lhasa to Calcutta, a major Indian coastal
city.
When China opened a trade mart at Renqinggang, some 16
kilometers from the Nathu La Pass, India opened the Changgu mart in
neighboring Sikkim. However, while Indian business people can stay
up at China's Renqinggang mart for the night, Chinese traders
cannot spend the night at the Indian mart.
Both sides have also agreed that the border trade season would
be from June through to September.
China does not impose any restrictions on cross border trade
except for illegal items, and hostels have been built to
accommodate Indian traders.
India, however, only authorizes the export of 29 kinds of
commodities to be exported from India to China, and 15 items to be
permitted to enter the Indian market from China.
The year 2006 has been designated the year of Sino-Indian
friendship.
Information from the Chinese Ministry of Commerce shows China
and India recorded US$18.73 billion of trade last year, up 37.5
percent year-on-year. And the figure is expected to exceed US$20
billion this year.
(Xinhua News Agency October 15, 2006)