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After 2 Years & One Major Skirmish, India, Pakistan Resume Trade

Pakistan on Wednesday approved imports of cotton, yarn, and sugar from India, resuming trade with New Delhi after nearly two years.

Finance Minister Hammad Azhar told a news conference in the capital Islamabad after a meeting of the Economic Coordination Council, a top decision-making body, that it is allowing the imports of some products from India.

“Prices of sugar in India are around 15% to 20% less than Pakistan and therefore we allowed import until June 30th, 2021,” Azhar said.

The private sector allowed imports of 500,000 metric tons of sugar from India, he added.

However, he explained that permission for these goods lasts only until this June. The move came after recent letter exchanges between Prime Minister Imran Khan and his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi.

In a congratulatory message for March 23, Pakistan Day, Modi said his country desires “cordial relations with the people of Pakistan.”

Responding to Modi’s message on Tuesday, Khan said his people also desire “peaceful, cooperative relations with all neighbors, including India.”

Welcoming the decision, Mohammad Jawed Bilwani, the chairman of the Pakistan Apparel Association, said the much-needed cotton and yarn imports from India will help boost the country’s crucial textile industry.

“Pakistan’s cotton production has gradually reduced by 50% in recent years, which has badly affected the textile industry, and 40 related sub-industries,” Bilwani told Anadolu Agency.

Currently, he said Pakistan annually produces a little over 7 million bales of cotton compared to 15 million bales about a decade ago.

In the circumstances, he said India is the best option to import the commodities, which are cheaper and nearer than other countries’.

Textile and related industries, including garments, make up about 70% of the exports of the South Asian state.

Trade suspension over Kashmir in 2019

In 2019, Pakistan suspended all exports and trade relations and downgraded its diplomatic ties with India after New Delhi’s move to scrap the special status of Indian-administered Kashmir.

Earlier, this ban was only limited to Israel, with which Pakistan has no diplomatic relations or trade ties.

The two neighbors, however, last month agreed to honor the 2003 cease-fire agreement along the Line of Control (LoC) – a de facto border that divides the picturesque Himalayan region between the two countries.

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