
NATHU LA PASS, India: The world’s two most populous countries India and
China are working to set up their first direct trade link since a 1962
border war by reopening a section of the famed Silk Road, Indian
officials said yesterday.
The point of contact is the 15,000-feet (4,545 metre) Nathu La pass on
the border between India’s Sikkim and China’s Tibet where hundreds of
Indian workers are repairing roads and building customs facilities,
Sikkim government spokesman B.B. Gurung said.
“As per plans, border trading is to begin from October 2 with the
reopening of the traditional Silk Road,” Gurung said.
“Infrastructure development and construction of roads leading to Nathu
La is going on at a brisk pace and everything should be complete before
the deadline.” The trading post, 52km from Sikkim capital Gangtok, is
the clearest sign yet of rapproachment between the two countries which
still dispute much of their 4,000-km border that stretches from Kashmir
in the west to India’s far-eastern state of Arunachal Pradesh.
Nathu La was a major trading point between the two countries before the
1962 war. It was also one of the main arteries of the Silk Road which
historically linked China via Central Asia to Europe.
The initial trade is expected to be much the same as in the Silk Road
days with Chinese silk, yak tails, and raw wool likely to hit Indian
markets via the small village of Sherathang, about five kilometers from
the Nathu La pass, traders said.
India expects to export farm products, textiles, watches, shoes, canned
food, tobacco, rice, and dried fruit.
The prospect of border trading has generated much interest in Sikkim
where unemployment is high.
“Once trading resumes, the economy of the region will change for the
better and with it we expect to get a major boost in the tourism sector
as well,” said Sikkim Chief Minister Pawan Kumar Chamling.
“Once this trade route is opened, there will be immense possibilities
of trade and commerce.” Both countries have recently pushed for greater
trade to tap a consumer market of 2.3 billion people, with two-way
trade now around $14 billion. – AFP
photo: A Chinese soldier interacts with an Indian soldier at the Nathu
La Pass area at the India-China border in Sikkim in August 2003.
– AFP Last update on: 12-9-2005 |