. Earth Science News .
Roadblocks hit trade at historic India, China mountain pass

Location of Nathu La border crossing in Sikkim.
by Staff Writers
Sherathang, India (AFP) July 27, 2008
Guo Ting stands patiently in the drizzling rain hoping to sell her wares, about half a dozen blankets wrapped in plastic, but only a few shoppers show up and nobody is buying.

"Business is not good as the market is too small," says Guo as she waits for custom at the Sherathang mart, about five kilometres (three miles) from the ancient Nathu La border crossing between India and China.

When the two Asian giants opened the 4,500-metre-high (15,000 feet) pass in 2006 to improve ties dogged by a bitter war in 1962 that saw the route closed for 44 years, many on both sides hoped it would boost trade.

Two years on, optimism has given way to despair as the flow of traders has shrunk to a trickle because of red tape, poor facilities and sub-standard roads in India's remote northeastern mountainous state of Sikkim.

Guo is among about 35 traders who cross the border daily from China's Tibetan region, while five or so Indians hawk their goods across Nathu La on weekdays when business is allowed.

Two years ago, as many as 50 Indians a day used the historic road for trade, but this year only 30 businessmen have applied for special permits, according to the Sikkim Chamber of Commerce.

"I don't have a permit. There's no use in going there when they can buy from us here," said Dolma Tsochung, who runs a shop at Sherathang market, where the Chinese do business.

Monthly trade has been cut by nearly two-thirds of what it was two years ago to about 700,000 rupees (16,200 dollars) -- a pittance compared to the 38.7 billion dollars of overall business the two countries conducted last year.

India and China aim to boost trade to 60 billion dollars in the next two years -- a large chunk of which experts say can be facilitated through Nathu La, the shortest route for freight between the two countries.

But traders complain that an outdated list of goods allowed to be traded is stifling potential.

Indians can export 29 goods and import 15, including goat skin and horses.

"The list is so outdated. We used to dismantle cars and send them to China to be reassembled there 40 years ago, and today we are supposed to be trading in horses," said S.K Sarda, president of the Sikkim Chamber of Commerce.

-- "Why would anyone come here?" --

"The bureaucrats sitting in their air-conditioned offices in Delhi have no idea about what's happening on the ground."

Business is also restricted to the traders of the tiny Sikkim state -- which lies between China, Bhutan and Nepal -- for the first five years, while there is far more potential from the neighbouring district of West Bengal.

At Sherathang, as the 2:30 pm closing time approaches, traders pack their goods and wrap them in the plastic sheets under which they do business so that they can be escorted back to the border by Chinese officials.

While the Chinese are allowed as far as Sherathang, Indians traders can go up to to the village of Renqinggang in Tibet.

The steep 52-kilometre (30-mile) drive from the Sikkim capital of Gangtok to Nathu La takes more than three hours -- making it impossible for more than a few to do business there.

"When things are much cheaper in Siliguri and Kolkata," the main cities in West Bengal, "why would anyone come here to buy from the Chinese," asks Tsering Bhutia, an interpreter who helps traders drive a hard bargain with his knowledge of four local languages.

The Sikkim government, however, has promised to widen roads and is considering a rail link.

Along the Gangtok-Nathu La route, dozens of workers are blasting the mountains to make the route wider so it can facilitate international trade.

The Sikkim Chamber of Commerce also holds out hope as the government considers a proposal by a private US firm for an ambitious rail link through a tunnel in the mountains which will cut costs considerably.

"Discussions on the tunnel are still going on. If the rail link comes, up to 40 percent of India-China trade can be conducted through Nathu La," said Sarda of the traders' body.

The railway could cut the time it takes to get from Siliguri town to Gangtok to 40 minutes, from three hours.

"The cost of freight and transit will be much lower then. If we could do massive trade before the 60s, we can still do it," Sarda said.

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Global Trade News



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


China's parliament warns of runaway inflation, calls for support for exports
Shanghai (AFP) July 23, 2008
China's parliament on Wednesday urged the government to do more to curb inflation, while also calling for more policy support for the export sector.







  • Asia forges agreement towards joint disaster taskforce
  • Chinese Earthquake Provides Lessons For Future
  • Asia's disaster response in spotlight at security talks
  • Thousands evacuated as storm hits China: state media

  • Limes May Help Cut CO2 Levels Back To Pre-Industrial Levels
  • Ontario joins US carbon trading clan
  • Australia's Rudd hits out at critics of carbon trading scheme
  • Australia to set up carbon trading scheme by 2010

  • GOCE Prepares For Shipment To Russia
  • NASA Works To Improve Short-Term Weather Forecasts
  • ESA To Consult The Science Community On Earth Explorer Selection
  • NASA's Deep Impact Films Earth As An Alien World

  • China's largest oil and gas producer cuts jobs: state media
  • Workers struggle to clean up oil spill on Mississippi
  • Scientists work on garbage for gas
  • Researchers Generate Hydrogen Without The Carbon Footprint

  • New Evidence Of Battle Between Humans And Ancient Virus
  • Dengue cases in Philippines rise by 43 percent: government
  • Using Biostatistics To Detect Disease Outbreaks
  • A Viral Cloaking Device

  • Mangroves Key To Saving Lives
  • Machine Evolution
  • The Genetics Of The White Horse Unraveled
  • Microbes Beneath Sea Floor Genetically Distinct

  • Study: Early Los Alamos toxin leaks higher
  • California passes strict shipping pollution laws
  • Peru fears environmental mining disaster
  • Mafia rubbish dumps seized as Berlusconi declares Naples clean

  • Outdoor Enthusiasts Scaring Off Native Carnivores In Parks
  • Archaeologists Trace Early Irrigation Farming In Ancient Yemen
  • Research Publications Online: Too Much Of A Good Thing
  • Will Our Future Brains Be Smaller

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement