Dhaka: Trade between India and Bangladesh through the Petrapole-Benapole border in West Bengal resumed on Sunday, July 5 after the state government opened the border for Bangladeshi lorries three months following its closure due to COVID-19, officials here said.
Officials said that the cross-border truck movements began at 2 on Sunday afternoon.
India had allowed export of goods from Petrapole, the largest land border port with Bangladesh, on June 7. But the West Bengal government was demanding those truck drivers coming from Bangladesh have to undergo a 14-day quarantine, in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, before entering the state with goods. As a result, consignments were halted at land borders
"Finally, the West Bengal authority opened the border for Bangladeshi lorries this afternoon as we sent an emergency letter to New Delhi on Friday seeking the central government's intervention," Foreign Minister AK Abdul Momen said.
Momen said that Bangladesh continued to allow Indian trucks inside its territory through the Petrapole- Benapole land port, "but the West Bengal authority refused to reciprocate" for the past three months in the wake of the coronavirus outbreak.
The minister said that the denial of West Bengal eventually prompted his office to seek New Delhi's intervention on the issue.
Officials at Benapole Port said the West Bengal government debarred entry of Bangladeshi trucks since March 23, while the cross-border trading witnessed a virtual standoff on Wednesday when the Bangladesh side also declined entry of Indian trucks through the land border as a mark of protest.
Benapole-Petrapole land port accounts for 70 percent of bilateral trade between Bangladesh and India.
The Federation of Indian Export Organisations (FIEO) on Friday also sought the intervention of Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal to resolve the stand-off. The exporters raised serious concerns over halting of consignments at the West Bengal-Bangladesh land border saying if the stalemate continues, it would impact the bilateral trade.
Meanwhile, the trade between Bangladesh and India remained unhindered through Akhaura point bordering Tripura.
About 60 percent of exports and imports between the two countries take place through the land routes. India's major export commodities to Bangladesh include raw cotton; cotton yarns, fabrics; iron and steel; petroleum products; auto and vehicle components; spices. While the major items imported by India include ready-made garments; vegetable oils; raw jute; jute yarns; inorganic chemicals.