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India's crackdown on Muslim-run leather units dents exports, hits jobs

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NEW DELHI - A government crackdown on Muslim-dominated abattoirs and the trade of cattle dragged down India's exports of leather shoes by more than 13 percent in June, as leading global brands turned to China, Bangladesh, Indonesia and Pakistan to secure supplies.

The drop in exports of shoes and leather garments comes as a setback for Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has sought to create millions of jobs by more than doubling the leather industry's revenues to $27 billion(R369.42 billion) by 2020.

Emboldened by the victory of Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the 2014 general election, Hindu hard-liners, who consider cows sacred, became more assertive in their calls for a clamp-down on both the meat and leather industries, run by Muslims, who make up 14 percent of India's 1.3 billion people.


"The writing was already on the wall," Nazir Ahmed, CEO of shoemaker Park Exports, told Reuters by phone from Agra, a shoe-making hub and home to the Taj Mahal. "We have killed the goose that laid the golden egg."

India, the world's second-biggest supplier of shoes and leather garments, exports nearly half its leather goods, with overseas sales estimated at $5.7 billion in the 2016/17 fiscal year to March, down 3.2 percent from a year earlier. Footwear exports fell more than 4 percent in April-June, to $674 million.

Informal sector

In March, after being appointed chief minister of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state and a major leather exporter, Yogi Adityanath, a firebrand Hindu monk, ordered a closure of abattoirs operating without licenses.

Slaughterhouse owners complain that much of India's meat and leather trade takes place in the informal sector, and it's hard to get licences, especially for smaller units.

In May, citing cruelty to animals, the federal government banned the trade of cattle for slaughter, and restricted livestock sales only for agricultural purposes such as ploughing and dairy production.

But the country’s top court overturned that order, citing the hardship the ban had caused.

That has not brought relief as repeated attacks on trucks carrying cattle still rankle the leather trade.


"The supreme court has allowed the resumption of trade for cattle, but the ground reality is that cow vigilante groups continue to be active and no one wants to risk his life by transporting cattle," Ahmed said.

Deterred by a clutch of measures that squeezed the supply of leather, a key raw material, brands like H&M, Inditex -owned Zara and Clarks, cut back their orders to India, said M. Rafeeque Ahmed, a leading shoe exporter from the southern city of Chennai and former president of the Federation of Indian Export Organisations.

"We lost orders because our buyers were sceptical of our ability to meet their requirements. Instead, most buyers moved to rival suppliers in Asia and southeast Asia," he said.

A spokesman for India's trade ministry declined to comment.

Earlier this year, a finance ministry report said India should sign more free trade agreements and make tax and labour reforms to drive leather exports, which offer "tremendous opportunities for (the) creation of jobs."

The industry is also grappling with a Goods and Services Tax, introduced in July, which has pushed up production costs by 6-7 percent, exporters said.

Nowhere to hide

The crackdown also hurt day-workers employed at shoe and garment making units and hit leather supplies, forcing manufacturers to import hides from the United States, Australia, and some European nations, raising the cost of production and squeezing margins.

Many tanneries, as a result, have run out of leather.


"My business has come to a standstill because I don't have any inventory at all. Most large shoemakers are importing hides now," said a tannery owner, who asked not to be named so as to avoid retaliation from cow vigilante groups.

Nearly a third of the roughly 3 million-strong workforce, mostly lowly-paid casual workers employed in the leather sector, have lost their jobs in the past six months, according to six shoemakers and two tannery owners interviewed by Reuters for this article.

Since most Indian states have outlawed cow slaughter, the supply of leather largely comes from the legal slaughter of buffaloes whose skins are used in many leather goods.

"Everyone must abide by the rule on cow slaughter and respect sentiments, but by choking the supply of other animal hides, we have nearly killed a thriving industry," said Ahmed of Park Exports.

See more at - http://www.enca.com/money/central-indian-floods-have-tripled-study
 
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All illegal entities were shut down. This happened in all sectors, not just the leather industry.

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com...post-demon-lapses-pm/articleshow/59406021.cms
"Forty-eight hours before the launch of GST, we, by one stroke of pen, cancelled the registration of one lakh companies which, based on the mining of deposits made in banks after November 8, were found to have engaged in serious irregularities," said Modi, adding that two lakh other registered companies are under the scanner for involvement in what looked like dubious transactions in the aftermath of demonetisation.

http://www.thehindubusinessline.com...directors-face-action-govt/article9846316.ece
“The names of 2,09,032 companies have been struck off from the register of companies under Section 248 (5) of the Act. The existing directors and authorised signatories of such struck-off companies will now become ex-directors or ex- authorised signatories,” an official release said.

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com...red-from-board-posts/articleshow/60370273.cms
At least two lakh directors on the board of companies, whose names have been struck off by the Registrar of Companies (RoC), will be barred from holding any board position in new ventures although they will not have to step down from the board of other companies on which they are currently directors.

This is not some ridiculous Muslim-targeted drive.
 
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I guess Jinnah was right. India is now becoming a "Hindu country" where Muslims would become persecuted.

Chaudhry Rehmat Ali also understood this as well.
 
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2014 before election, Pradhan Sewak:


The most hypocrite PM on this globe!

tem4rfre.png



http://in.reuters.com/article/india...r-units-dents-exports-hits-jobs-idINKCN1C907N
 
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Most of these leather factories operate right next to water bodies, contaminating both the ground as well the water bodies.

It is preferable that these companies are closed to the damage they do to the environment and people near it.
 
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ordered a closure of abattoirs operating without licenses.
ppl deliberately miss the main point. They condone illegal activity and ask why when action is taken.

Ban was on illegal abattoirs, I wonder why Muslims in India were making a profit from HARAM means to begin with? Stop whining, pay your taxes, get a licence and carry on with the work.
nah well it seems one particular community has license to break the laws all over the world. When law is upheld it becomes anti-community act ..... you know the rest what happens later.
 
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NEW DELHI - A government crackdown on Muslim-dominated abattoirs and the trade of cattle dragged down India's exports of leather shoes by more than 13 percent in June, as leading global brands turned to China, Bangladesh, Indonesia and Pakistan to secure supplies.

The drop in exports of shoes and leather garments comes as a setback for Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has sought to create millions of jobs by more than doubling the leather industry's revenues to $27 billion(R369.42 billion) by 2020.

Emboldened by the victory of Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the 2014 general election, Hindu hard-liners, who consider cows sacred, became more assertive in their calls for a clamp-down on both the meat and leather industries, run by Muslims, who make up 14 percent of India's 1.3 billion people.


"The writing was already on the wall," Nazir Ahmed, CEO of shoemaker Park Exports, told Reuters by phone from Agra, a shoe-making hub and home to the Taj Mahal. "We have killed the goose that laid the golden egg."

India, the world's second-biggest supplier of shoes and leather garments, exports nearly half its leather goods, with overseas sales estimated at $5.7 billion in the 2016/17 fiscal year to March, down 3.2 percent from a year earlier. Footwear exports fell more than 4 percent in April-June, to $674 million.

Informal sector

In March, after being appointed chief minister of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state and a major leather exporter, Yogi Adityanath, a firebrand Hindu monk, ordered a closure of abattoirs operating without licenses.

Slaughterhouse owners complain that much of India's meat and leather trade takes place in the informal sector, and it's hard to get licences, especially for smaller units.

In May, citing cruelty to animals, the federal government banned the trade of cattle for slaughter, and restricted livestock sales only for agricultural purposes such as ploughing and dairy production.

But the country’s top court overturned that order, citing the hardship the ban had caused.

That has not brought relief as repeated attacks on trucks carrying cattle still rankle the leather trade.


"The supreme court has allowed the resumption of trade for cattle, but the ground reality is that cow vigilante groups continue to be active and no one wants to risk his life by transporting cattle," Ahmed said.

Deterred by a clutch of measures that squeezed the supply of leather, a key raw material, brands like H&M, Inditex -owned Zara and Clarks, cut back their orders to India, said M. Rafeeque Ahmed, a leading shoe exporter from the southern city of Chennai and former president of the Federation of Indian Export Organisations.

"We lost orders because our buyers were sceptical of our ability to meet their requirements. Instead, most buyers moved to rival suppliers in Asia and southeast Asia," he said.

A spokesman for India's trade ministry declined to comment.

Earlier this year, a finance ministry report said India should sign more free trade agreements and make tax and labour reforms to drive leather exports, which offer "tremendous opportunities for (the) creation of jobs."

The industry is also grappling with a Goods and Services Tax, introduced in July, which has pushed up production costs by 6-7 percent, exporters said.

Nowhere to hide

The crackdown also hurt day-workers employed at shoe and garment making units and hit leather supplies, forcing manufacturers to import hides from the United States, Australia, and some European nations, raising the cost of production and squeezing margins.

Many tanneries, as a result, have run out of leather.


"My business has come to a standstill because I don't have any inventory at all. Most large shoemakers are importing hides now," said a tannery owner, who asked not to be named so as to avoid retaliation from cow vigilante groups.

Nearly a third of the roughly 3 million-strong workforce, mostly lowly-paid casual workers employed in the leather sector, have lost their jobs in the past six months, according to six shoemakers and two tannery owners interviewed by Reuters for this article.

Since most Indian states have outlawed cow slaughter, the supply of leather largely comes from the legal slaughter of buffaloes whose skins are used in many leather goods.

"Everyone must abide by the rule on cow slaughter and respect sentiments, but by choking the supply of other animal hides, we have nearly killed a thriving industry," said Ahmed of Park Exports.

See more at - http://www.enca.com/money/central-indian-floods-have-tripled-study

Incorrect article, bordering towards fake news.
It was 2013 decision of NGT, quasi judicial body, since most of leather units were not following environmental laws for waste processing, which was not implemented by then UPA govt for vote bank politics. This government has guts and will power to enforce the judicial decisions.
Rest can walk in the park.
 
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Incorrect article, bordering towards fake news.
It was 2013 decision of NGT, quasi judicial body, since most of leather units were not following environmental laws for waste processing, which was not implemented by then UPA govt for vote bank politics. This government has guts and will power to enforce the judicial decisions.
Rest can walk in the park.

If the industry is affecting the environment, you could help them to relocate their facilities to a dedicated SEZ or something like what we are doing in Bangladesh with our tanneries.

Accept it or not, this ban is just a result of the lobbying the Islamophobic cow vigilante groups, even when the supreme court has overturned the decision.

End of the day, your economy is losing billions of dollars of revenue to other countries while millions are becoming jobless. Especially, when the Indian economy has begun to slowdown as a result of the demonetization and other reforms.
 
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If the industry is affecting the environment, you could help them to relocate their facilities to a dedicated SEZ or something like what we are doing in Bangladesh with our tanneries.

Accept it or not, this ban is just a result of the lobbying the Islamophobic cow vigilante groups, even when the supreme court has overturned the decision.

End of the day, your economy is losing billions of dollars of revenue to other countries while millions are becoming jobless. Especially, when the Indian economy has begun to slowdown as a result of the demonetization and other reforms.

Then see NGT order and compliant UP govt order to assist tanneries by installing waste management system. Since these tanneries procure animals illegally, they choose to not being part of system altogether to avoid tax and scrutiny.
 
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