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Bangladesh may withdraw complaint over EU help for Pakistan

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Bangladesh may withdraw complaint over EU help for Pakistan

Bangladesh is considering withdrawing a complaint about a European move to grant beneficial import conditions to Pakistani textile makers as an aid measure following Pakistan’s floods last year, a senior Bangladeshi official said on Wednesday.

Europe and Pakistan had expected a long-announced plan for trade preferences for Pakistani textile makers to be approved during a meeting of trade diplomats in Geneva this week, but a Bangladeshi complaint halted the move.

Pakistan was being granted the beneficial import conditions to its textile makers as an aid measure following devastating floods in the South Asian country last year.

Bangladeshi officials said their Pakistani counterparts had “unofficially” raised the matter on the sidelines of an ongoing South Asian leaders’ summit on this remote Maldivian atoll.

“I will check with Geneva … as far as I know we are supposed to withdraw this (complaint),” Bangladesh Foreign Secretary Mohamed Mijarul Quayes told Reuters.

“There has been some informal discussion on this here with the Pakistani officials,” he said. “They have asked us unofficially about it and we have told them we are checking and will get back to them. So discussions are on to find out a way.”

Islamabad called Dhaka’s objections to the beneficial import conditions for its textile makers “an accident”.

“Of course, we are very concerned about it. We have been conveyed by them that it was at best an accident,” Hina Rabbani Khar, Pakistan’s foreign minister, told Reuters.

Bangladesh had concerns about the impact of the European measures, which would make it easier for Pakistan to export textiles to Europe.

Bangladesh competes with Pakistan for textiles sales to the European market.

The two-year cut in tariffs offered by the EU would be a small boost for Pakistan’s exporters.

World Trade Organization rules say the same deal must be offered to all trade partners, so by making an exception for Pakistan, the EU needs to get all WTO members on side and any one country can block the deal.

Until recently India, Pakistan’s neighbour and rival had objected to the European plan, effectively vetoing it.

But as tensions between the two traditional South Asian enemies have eased, India signaled it no longer opposed the plan.
 
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Bangladesh may withdraw complaint over EU help for Pakistan

Bangladesh is considering withdrawing a complaint about a European move to grant beneficial import conditions to Pakistani textile makers as an aid measure following Pakistan’s floods last year, a senior Bangladeshi official said on Wednesday.

Europe and Pakistan had expected a long-announced plan for trade preferences for Pakistani textile makers to be approved during a meeting of trade diplomats in Geneva this week, but a Bangladeshi complaint halted the move.

Pakistan was being granted the beneficial import conditions to its textile makers as an aid measure following devastating floods in the South Asian country last year.

Bangladeshi officials said their Pakistani counterparts had “unofficially” raised the matter on the sidelines of an ongoing South Asian leaders’ summit on this remote Maldivian atoll.

“I will check with Geneva … as far as I know we are supposed to withdraw this (complaint),” Bangladesh Foreign Secretary Mohamed Mijarul Quayes told Reuters.

“There has been some informal discussion on this here with the Pakistani officials,” he said. “They have asked us unofficially about it and we have told them we are checking and will get back to them. So discussions are on to find out a way.”

Islamabad called Dhaka’s objections to the beneficial import conditions for its textile makers “an accident”.

“Of course, we are very concerned about it. We have been conveyed by them that it was at best an accident,” Hina Rabbani Khar, Pakistan’s foreign minister, told Reuters.

Bangladesh had concerns about the impact of the European measures, which would make it easier for Pakistan to export textiles to Europe.

Bangladesh competes with Pakistan for textiles sales to the European market.

The two-year cut in tariffs offered by the EU would be a small boost for Pakistan’s exporters.

World Trade Organization rules say the same deal must be offered to all trade partners, so by making an exception for Pakistan, the EU needs to get all WTO members on side and any one country can block the deal.

Until recently India, Pakistan’s neighbour and rival had objected to the European plan, effectively vetoing it.

But as tensions between the two traditional South Asian enemies have eased, India signaled it no longer opposed the plan.

Islamabad called Dhaka’s objections to the beneficial import conditions for its textile makers “an accident”.


Well, it doesn't seem like an accident, after all..

Bangladesh retracts assurances given to Gilani, Hina
17 November, 2011

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan faced great embarrassment on Wednesday when after winning the consent of 150 countries, Bangladesh once again made it clear it would not remove its objections at the World Trade Organisation (WTO) meeting that calls for the European Union to allow Pakistan a two-year cut in tariffs to boost Pakistan's economy shattered by the massive floods of 2010.

Last Sunday, upon her return from the Saarc summit, when Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar was asked specifically whether she believed Bangladesh would deliver, she said Dhaka had given her an assurance in Maldives. It seems now that Bangladesh has no intention of upholding this promise.

Bilateral relations between Pakistan and Bangladesh are lukewarm at best, which can be gauged from the fact that there was no formal bilateral meeting between the two prime ministers during the recent Saarc summit in Maldives.

The next meeting of the WTO Council for Trade in Goods will take place in Geneva around the third week of November. Bangladesh has concerns about the impact of the European measures, which would make it easier for Pakistan to export textiles to Europe. Bangladesh competes with Pakistan for textile sales to the European market.

The Bangladeshi commerce minister, M Faruk Khan, said in Dhaka, "Our position is clear. One should not mix aid with trade. We do not support any aid for trade programme for a country which is our competitor. We have formulated our strategy under which we oppose duty-free access of eight products because it will expose our exporters to competition. Exports over $100 million will be affected if the privilege is extended to Islamabad."

The offer from the European Union would allow the import of 75 Pakistani items, earning the country millions of dollars for a two-year period. The WTO works by consensus and the EU requires all WTO members to give consent to the EU proposal.

Officials confess there is little more that they can do. Prime Minister Yusuf Reza Gilani and Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar have personally taken the issue up with their Bangladeshi counterparts earlier in Perth and most recently in Maldives. Khar says that an assurance was given that in future, Bangladesh would not raise further objections at the WTO meetings that work by consensus.

Europe and Pakistan had expected a long-announced plan for trade preferences for Pakistani textile makers to be approved during a meeting of trade diplomats in Geneva on Monday, but a Bangladeshi complaint effectively halted it.

Bangladesh retracts assurances given to Gilani, Hina - PakTribune
 
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So it must be clear for Pakistanis now that every country looks for its own interest, no offence but i don't know why Pakistanis are in too much blind love with Bangladesh. Hide your identity in any foreign land & than ask Bangladeshis how they feel for Pakistan, 90% will comeup with, "i hope Sindh & Balochistan become separate", or "Pakistan is terrorists land, all terrorist live there" or "Pakistan is finished" etc etc.

Wo kehtay hain na Urdu mein "aisay dost say dushman behtar hai"
 
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Well, seems like Bangladesh wants withdrawl of 6 items from the listed 75 items. Pakistan can still avail the benifit with an exception of this 6 items. Its all good.
 
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This could seriously affect employment rates, if Bangladesh was to agree for Pakistan sake.
 
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Pakistan and Bangladesh don't really compete for the European Market. Bangladesh mostly deals in apparel and Pakistan mostly deals in towels and bedcovers. Secondly, much of the gray fabric for Bangladesh's apparel exports comes from Pakistan. So we aren't really competitors.
 
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ehsaan ker rahy hain saly? ever they remember our help for them? its bad time on pakistan and we are watching who is real friend brother ally at bad time .:rolleyes:
 
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Pakistan and Bangladesh don't really compete for the European Market. Bangladesh mostly deals in apparel and Pakistan mostly deals in towels and bedcovers. Secondly, much of the gray fabric for Bangladesh's apparel exports comes from Pakistan. So we aren't really competitors.

Bangladesh export 1 billion dollar worth of Home Texties. So yes Pakistan is a major competitor in that segment.
 
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Object , then withdraw it..

Does not speak well of the foreign ministry.
 
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ehsaan ker rahy hain saly? ever they remember our help for them? its bad time on pakistan and we are watching who is real friend brother ally at bad time .:rolleyes:

Due to Pakistans objection Bangladesh lost preferential tariff concession in USA market in Doha round talk of WTO. Pakistan was backed by India and Srilanka. So its not a fair world. Is it?
 
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Due to Pakistans objection Bangladesh lost preferential tariff concession in USA market in Doha round talk of WTO. Pakistan was backed by India and Srilanka. So its not a fair world. Is it?

ok do it lets wait for future lolz
 
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Bangladesh export 1 billion dollar worth of Home Texties. So yes Pakistan is a major competitor in that segment.

Pakistan exported over US$ 10.6 Billion worth of textiles to EU in 2008, most of which were towels and bedsheets, so like I said, we pretty much own that field.
 
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