Chapter 01 - Customs Tariff (Determination of Origin of Products under the Duty Free Tariff Preference Scheme for Least Developed Countries) Rules, 2015 (From Rule 1 to Annexure - C)
Suspension of preferential treatment: grounds include fraud or excess imports, with mandated consultation and possible restoration or denial. The Government may suspend preferential treatment under the Duty Free Tariff Preference Scheme for products from a beneficiary country where fraud, irregularities, systematic non compliance, or imports exceeding production and export capacity are evidenced. Reasons for suspension must be communicated within fifteen days. The beneficiary may seek consultations by e mail, video conference, meetings or joint investigation. Resolution must be prompt and may result in restoration of benefits with retrospective effect, restoration prospectively subject to agreed measures, or denial of benefits.
Cases where this provision is explicitly mentioned in the judgment/order text; may not be exhaustive. To view the complete list of cases mentioning this section, Click here.
Provisions expressly mentioned in the judgment/order text.
Suspension of preferential treatment: grounds include fraud or excess imports, with mandated consultation and possible restoration or denial.
The Government may suspend preferential treatment under the Duty Free Tariff Preference Scheme for products from a beneficiary country where fraud, irregularities, systematic non compliance, or imports exceeding production and export capacity are evidenced. Reasons for suspension must be communicated within fifteen days. The beneficiary may seek consultations by e mail, video conference, meetings or joint investigation. Resolution must be prompt and may result in restoration of benefits with retrospective effect, restoration prospectively subject to agreed measures, or denial of benefits.
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