India bans imports of more goods from Bangladesh
    Date :13-Aug-2025

India bans imports of more goods from Bangladesh
 
 
NEW DELHI :
 
INDIA has expanded the list of imports from Bangladesh that are banned from entry through any land port on the border by including more jute products amid deteriorating relations with the neighbouring country. These additional goods, which have been banned with immediate effect, include bleached and unbleached woven fabrics made of jute or other textile bast fibres; twine, cordage, andropemade ofjute; twine,cordage,rope,andcables; as well as sacks and bags made of jute.
 
These items will not be allowed through any Land Customs Stations orIntegrated Check Posts in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura and Mizoram, as well as LCS Changrabandha and Fulbari in West Bengal. According to the notification issued by the Director General of Foreign Trade, the import of these goods is allowed only via Navi Mumbai’s Nhava Sheva Seaport. The notification further said theserestrictionswouldn’tapply to Bangladesh exports to Nepal or Bhutan, while noting, “Reexport of the aforesaid Bangladesh goods to India from Nepal or Bhutan shall not be allowed.” Earlier, in a notification datedJune 27, the department listed several goods from Bangladesh that would be subject toregulation.Theseinclude flax tow and waste (including yarnwasteandgarnettedstock); jute andothertextilebast fibres, raw or retted; jute (excluding flax, truehemp, andramie);single flax yarn; single yarn of jute or other textile bast fibres;multiple folded yarn; woven fabrics of flax; and unbleached woven fabricsofjuteorother textilebast fibres. Besides, on May 17, India banned the import of goods, like readymade garments and processed food items, from Bangladesh to India through cross-border trade points with the neighbouring country.
 
This decisionisexpected tohitgoods worth $770 million (Rs 6,600 crore) that flow in from Bangladesh. Readymade garments, valued at $618 million (Rs 5,290 crore), now face strict routing throughonly twoIndian seaports. This severely limits Bangladesh’s most valuable export channel to India. The other goods that have been barred from entry into India through thelandcustoms stations on the border include fruit-flavoured carbonated drinks, processed foods, cotton and cotton yarn waste, plastic and PVC finished goods, and wooden furniture.The total value of these items is pegged at around $153 million (Rs 1,310 crore). According to the directive, “Import of all kinds of ReadyMade Garments from Bangladesh shallnotbeallowed from any land port; however, it is allowed only through Nhava Sheva and Kolkata seaports.” The Indian move came after the Bangladesh government in Aprilbanned theimportofyarns from India to the country via land ports through a notification from the NationalBoard of Revenue.