08/09/2006, 00.00
NEPAL – UNITED STATES
Send to a friend

Drop in exports to US, punitive move against Nepali Maoists

by Prakash Dubey
The country's garment industry, Nepal's main foreign exchange earner, suffers a drastic cut. The jobs of some 50,000 workers are threatened. For analysts, the move is a warning to the Nepali government which wants to include Maoists before disarming them.

Kathmandu (AsiaNews) – The United States has "drastically" cut garment imports from Nepal. In the Asian country the move, it is feared, might have serious repercussion on employment levels in the garment industry, whilst analysts wonder whether it is a punitive move against the authorities in Kathmandu for their willingness to let former Maoist rebels join the current provisional government without disarming them.

According to the Garment Association of Nepal, exports to the United States declined by 17 per cent in July over last year, with the monthly value dropping to US$ 3.9 million from US$ 4.67 a year ago.

The US represents Nepal's major export market and the garment industry is the mountain kingdom's largest foreign exchange earners.

Nepali exporters warn that the decline in exports to US could threaten the jobs of some 50,000 workers who would have otherwise no other way of making a living.

For some political analysts US opposition to Maoist presence in the government before the former rebels are disarmed is the main explanation.

Last month US envoy to Nepal, James Moiarty, warned Kathmandu to be cautious. He told the government that without prior disarmament of the Maoists the United States would cut off aid to the country.

He explicitly said the US still considered the Maoists as terrorists and would never approve their inclusion in the government if they did not hand in their weapons.

Ramekbal Choudhary, a political and social analyst, told AsiaNews that the drop in Nepali garment exports to the US in July "is an obvious signal that US won't swallow the inclusion of Maoists in government as long as they don't give up arms. "

He added that "more economic punitive measures could follow if the US's warning is not duly heeded."

TAGs
Send to a friend
Printable version
CLOSE X
See also
Pope talks about the Middle East, the Holy Land and the food crisis with Bush
13/06/2008
Power outages threaten lives and production
06/06/2023 14:02
White House to stop Beijing's "imperialist" policy in the South China Sea
24/01/2017 15:55
Global crisis forces Kazakhstan to cut 2009 budget
17/04/2009
China to cut rare earths export quotas by 35 per cent
29/12/2010


Newsletter

Subscribe to Asia News updates or change your preferences

Subscribe now
“L’Asia: ecco il nostro comune compito per il terzo millennio!” - Giovanni Paolo II, da “Alzatevi, andiamo”