
PREAMBLE
The Government of the Republic of India and the Government of the
Democratic Socialist Republic of
Sri Lanka, (hereinafter referred to as the "Contracting Parties").
CONSIDERING that the expansion of their domestic markets, through economic
integration, is a vital prerequisite for accelerating their processes of economic
development.
BEARING in mind the desire to promote mutually beneficial bilateral trade.
CONVINCED of the need to establish and promote free trade arrangements for
strengthening intra-regional economic cooperation and the development of national
economies.
FURTHER RECOGNIZING that progressive reductions and elimination of obstacles to
bilateral trade through a bilateral free trade agreement (hereinafter referred to as
"The Agreement") would contribute to the expansion of world trade.
HAVE agreed as follows:
Article I - Objectives
Article II - Definitions
Article III - Elimination of Tariffs
Article IV - General Exceptions
Article V - National Treatment
Article VI - State Trading Enterprises
Article VII - Rules of Origin
Article VIII - Safeguard Measures
Article IX - Domestic Legislation
Article X - Balance of Payment Measures
Article XI - Joint Committee
Article XII - Consultations
Article XIII - Settlement of Disputes
Article XIV - Duration and Termination of Agreement
Article XV - Amendments
Article XVI - Annexures to be finalized
Article XVII - Entry into Force
Annexure - 'A' - Concession offered by India
Annexure - 'B' - Concession offered by SriLanka
Annexure - 'C' - Rules of Origin
The Contracting Parties shall establish a Free Trade Area in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement and in conformity with relevant provisions of the General Agreement on Tariff and Trade, 1994.
The objectives of this Agreement are:
(i) To promote through the expansion of trade the harmonious development of the economic relations between India and Sri Lanka.
(ii) To provide fair conditions of competition for trade between India and Sri Lanka
(iii) In the implementation of this Agreement the Contracting Parties shall pay due regard to the principle of reciprocity
(iv) To contribute in this way, by the removal of barriers to trade, to the harmonious development and expansion of world trade
For the purpose of this agreement:
"Tariffs" means basic customs duties included in the national schedules of the Contracting Parties.
"Products" means all products including manufactures and commodities in their raw, semi-processed and processed forms.
"Preferential Treatment" means any concession or privilege granted under this Agreement by a Contracting Party through the elimination of tariffs on the movement of goods.
"The Committee" means the Joint Committee referred to in Article XI.
"Serious Injury" means significant damage to domestic producers, of like or similar products resulting from a substantial increase of preferential imports in situations which cause substantial losses in terms of earnings, production or employment unsustainable in the short term. The examination of the impact on the domestic industry concerned shall also include an evaluation of other relevant economic factors and indices having a bearing on the state of the domestic industry of that product.
"Threat of serious injury" means a situation in which a substantial increase of preferential imports is of a nature so as to cause "Serious injury" to domestic producers, and that such injury, although not yet existing is clearly imminent. A determination of threat of serious injury shall be based on facts and not on more allegation, conjecture, or remote or hypothetical possibility.
"Critical circumstances" means the emergence of an exceptional situation where massive preferential imports are causing or threatening to cause "serious injury" difficult to repair and which calls for immediate action.
The Contracting Parties hereby agree to establish a Free Trade Area for the purpose of
free movement of goods between their countries through elimination of tariffs on the
movement of goods in accordance with the provisions of Annexures A & B which shall
form an integral part of this Agreement.
Nothing in this Agreement shall prevent any Contracting Party from taking action and
adopting measures, which it considers necessary for the protection of its national
security, the protection of public morals, the protection of human, animal or plant life
and health, and the protection of articles of artistic, historic and archaeological value,
as is provided for in Articles XX and XXI of the General Agreement on Tariff and Trade,
1994.
The Contracting Parties affirm their commitment to the principles enshrined in Article III
of GATT 1994.
Nothing in this Agreement shall be construed to prevent a Contracting Party from maintaining or establishing a state trading enterprise as understood in Article XVII of General Agreement on Tariff and Trade, 1994.
Each Contracting Party shall ensure that any state enterprise that it
maintains or establishes acts in a manner that is not inconsistent with the obligations of
the Contracting Parties, under this Agreement and accords non-discriminatory treatment in
the import from and export to the other Contracting Party.
Products covered by the provisions of this Agreement shall be eligible for preferential treatment provided they satisfy the Rules of Origin as set out in Annexure C to this Agreement which shall form an integral part of this Agreement.
For the development of specific sectors of the industry of either
Contracting Party, lower value addition norms for the products manufactured or produced by
those sectors may be considered through mutual negotiations.
If any product, which is the subject of preferential treatment under
this Agreement, is imported into the territory of a Contracting Party in such a
manner or in such quantities as to cause or threaten to cause, serious injury
in the importing Contracting Party, the importing Contracting Party may, with prior
consultations except in critical circumstances, suspend provisionally without
discrimination the preferential treatment accorded under the Agreement.
When action has been taken by either Contracting Party in terms of
paragraph I of this Article, it shall simultaneously notify the other Contracting Party
and the Joint Committee established in terms of Article XI. The Committee shall enter into
consultations with the concerned Contracting Party and endeavor to reach mutually
acceptable agreement to remedy the situation. Should the consultations in the Committee
fail to resolve the issue within sixty days, the party affected by such action shall
have the right to withdraw the preferential treatment.
The Contracting Parties shall be free to apply their domestic legislation to restrict
imports, in cases where prices are influenced by unfair trade practices like subsidies or
dumping. Subsidies and dumping shall be understood to have the same meaning as in the
General Agreement on Tariff and Trade, 1994 and the relevant WTO Agreements.
Notwithstanding the provisions of this Agreement, any Contracting Party facing balance of payments difficulties may suspend provisionally the preferential treatment as to the quantity and value of merchandise permitted to be imported under the Agreement. When such action has taken place, the Contracting Party, which initiates such action shall simultaneously notify the other Contracting Party.
Any Contracting Party, which takes action according to paragraph 1 of
this Article, shall afford, upon request from the other Contracting Party, adequate
opportunities for consultations with a view to preserving the stability of the
preferential treatment provided under this Agreement.
A Joint Committee shall be established at Ministerial level. The Committee shall meet at least once a year to review the progress made in the implementation of this Agreement and to ensure that benefits of trade expansion emanating from this Agreement accrue to both Contracting Parties equitably. The Committee may set up Sub-Committees and/or Working Groups as considered necessary.
In order to facilitate cooperation in customs matters, the Contracting Parties agree to establish a Working Group on customs related issues including harmonization of tariff headings. The Working Group shall meet as often as required and shall report to the Committee on its deliberations.
The Committee shall accord adequate opportunities for consultation on representations made by any Contracting Party with respect to any matter affecting the implementation of the Agreement. The Committee shall adopt appropriate measures for settling any matter arising from such representations within 6 months of the representation being made. Each Contracting Party shall implement such measures immediately.
The Committee shall nominate one apex chamber of trade and industry in
each country as the nodal chamber to represent the views of the trade and industry on
matters relating to this Agreement.
Each Contracting Party shall accord sympathetic consideration to and
shall afford adequate opportunity for, consultations regarding such representations as may
be made by the other Contracting Party with respect to any matter affecting the
operation of this Agreement.
The Committee may meet at the request of a Contracting Party to consider
any matter for which it has not been possible to find a satisfactory solution through
consultations under paragraph 1 above.
Any dispute that may arise between commercial entities of the Contracting Parties shall be referred for amicable settlement to the nodal apex chambers. Such references shall, as far as possible, be settled through mutual consultations by the Chambers. In the event of an amicable solution not being found, the matter shall be referred to an Arbitral Tribunal for a binding decision. The Tribunal shall be constituted the Joint Committee in consultation with the relevant Arbitration Bodies in the two countries.
Any dispute between the Contracting Parties regarding the interpretation and application of the provisions of this Agreement or any instrument adopted within its framework shall be amicably settled through negotiations failing which a notification may be made to the Committee by any one of the Contracting Parties.
Duration and Termination of Agreement
This Agreement shall remain in force until either Contracting Party terminates this
Agreement by giving six months written notice to the other of its intention to terminate
the Agreement.
The Agreement may be modified or amended through mutual agreement of the Contracting
Parties. Proposals for such modifications or amendments shall be submitted to the Joint
Committee and upon acceptance by the Joint Committee, shall be approved in accordance with
the applicable legal procedures of each Contracting Party. Such modifications or
amendments shall become effective when confirmed through an exchange of diplomatic notes
and shall constitute an integral part of the Agreement.
Provided however that in emergency situations, proposals for modifications may be
considered by the Contracting Parties and if agreed, given effect to through an exchange
of diplomatic notes.
Annexure D(i) and D(ii) (Negative Lists of India and Sri Lanka respectively), E (Items on
which India has undertaken to give 100% tariff concession on coming into force of the
Agreement) and F (Items on which Sri Lanka has undertaken to give 100% tariff concession
on the coming into force of the Agreement) shall be finalised within a period of 60 days
of the signing of this Agreement. All the Annexures shall form an integral part of the
Agreement.
The Agreement shall enter into force on the thirtieth day after the Contracting Parties
hereto have notified each other that their respective constitutional requirements and
procedures have been completed.
In witness where of the undersigned, duly authorised thereto by their respective
Governments, have signed this Agreement.
Done in duplicate at New Delhi this 28th day of December 1998 in two originals in the
English language.
Sd/- For the Government of the Republic of India |
Sd/- For the Government of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka |
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HOME Concession offered by India The Government of India shall grant duty free access to all exports
from Sri Lanka in respect of items
RELEVANT INDIAN CUSTOMS NOTIFICATION
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Concession offered by Sri Lanka
Government of Sri Lanka shall provide tariff concessions on exports from India to Sri Lanka in respect of items freely importable into Sri Lanka, as detailed below:-
CONCESSION OFFERED BY SRI LANKA
RULES OF ORIGIN
These rules may be called the rules of Determination of Origin of Goods under the Free Trade Agreement between the Democratic Socialistic Republic of Sri Lanka and the Republic of India.
These rules shall apply to products consigned from the territory of either of the Contracting Parties.
No product shall be deemed to be the produce or manufacture of either country unless the conditions specified in these rules are complied with in relation to such products, to the satisfaction of the appropriate Authority.
The importer of the product shall, at the time of importation:
Products covered by the Agreement imported into the territory of a Contracting Party from another Contracting Party which are consigned directly within the meaning of rule 9 hereof, shall be eligible for preferential treatment if they conform to the origin requirement under any one of the following conditions:
Within the meaning of rule 5(a), the following shall be considered as wholly produced or obtained in the territory of the exporting Contracting Party:
(ii) simple slicing, cutting and repacking or placing in bottles, flasks, bags, boxes, fixing on cards or boards, etc., and all other simple packing operations.
In respect of a product, which complies with the origin requirements provided in rule 5(b) and is exported by any Contracting Party and which has used material, parts or products originating in the territory of the other Contracting Party, the value addition in the territory of the exporting Contracting Party shall be not less than 25 per cent of the f.o.b. value of the product under export subject to the condition that the aggregate value addition in the territories of the Contracting Parties is not less than 35 per cent of the f.o.b. value of the product under export.
The following shall be considered to be directly consigned from the exporting country to the importing country:
When determining the origin of products, packing should be considered as forming a whole with the product it contains. However, packing may be treated separately if the national legislation so requires.
Products eligible for a Certificate of origin in the form annexed shall support preferential treatment issued by an authority designated by the Government of the exporting country and notified to the other country in accordance with the certification procedures to be devised and approved by both the Contracting Parties.
Either country may prohibit importation of products containing any inputs originating from States with which it does not have economic and commercial relations;
Notes:
CERTIFICATE OF ORIGIN
1. Goods consigned from (Exporters Business Name, Address, Country) |
Reference No. INDO-SRI LANKA FREE TRADE AGREEMENT (ISFTA) (Combined declaration and certificate)
Issued in . (Country) (See notes overleaf) |
||||||
| 2. Goods consigned to (Consignees Name, Address, Country) | 4. For Official use | ||||||
| 3. Means of transport and route (as far as known) | |||||||
5. Tariff item number |
6. Marks and numbers of packages | 7. Number and kind of packages: description of goods | 8. Origin criterion (see Notes overleaf) | 9. Gross weight or other quantity | 10. Number and date of invoice
|
||
| 11. Declaration by the
Exporter The undersigned hereby declares that the above details and statements are correct; That all the goods were produced in
(Country)
and that they comply with the origin requirements specified for those goods in ISFTA for goods exported to
(Importing Country)
. Place and date, signature of the authorised signatory |
12. Certificate:
It is hereby certified, on the basis of control carried out that the declaration by the exporter is correct.
. Place and date, signature and stamp of certifying authority. |
||||||
I. To qualify for preference, products must:
- fall within a description of products eligible for concessions in the country of destination under this agreement.
- comply with ISFTA Rules of Origin. Each Article in a consignment must qualify separately in its own right; and
- comply with the consignment conditions specified by the ISFTA Rules of Origin. In general products must be consigned directly within the meaning of Rule 9 hereof from the country of exportation to the country of destination.
II. Entries to be made in Box 8
Preference products must be wholly produced or obtained in the exporting Contracting Party in accordance with Rule 6 of the ISFTA Rule of Origin, or where not wholly produced or obtained in the exporting Contracting Party must be eligible under Rule 7 or Rule 8.
- Products wholly produced or obtained enter the letter A in box 8.
- Products not wholly produced or obtained; the entry in box 8 should be as follows:
- Enter letter B in box 8 for products, which meet the origin criterion according to Rule 7. Entry of letter would be followed by the sum of the value of materials, parts or produce originating from non-contracting parties or undetermined origin used, expressed as a percentage of the f.o.b. value of the products; (example B( ) percent).
- Enter letter C in box 8 for products, which meet the origin criteria according to Rule 8. Entry of letter C would be followed by the sum of the aggregate content originating in the territory of the exporting Contracting Party expressed as a percentage of the f.o.b. value of the exported product: (example C ( ) per cent).