Commerce Adviser acknowledges public suffering amid rice price hike
January 10, 2025 00:00:00
Acknowledging the suffering of general people due to rice price hike, Commerce Adviser Sk. Bashir Uddin has said that the government cut a 60 per cent duty on rice import to keep the local market stable, reports UNB.
He said this while talking to reporters after a meeting with his Turkey counterpart Prof Dr Ömer Bolat at the Secretariat on Thursday.
Asked about the preparedness ahead of the Ramadan to keep commodities at tolerable levels, he said, "We are prepared overall with the Ramadan and taking several initiatives on the rice market at this moment. We are relaxing the import while the duty on rice import was about 63 per cent; we have reduced it to 3 per cent."
The Ministry of Food has been importing several lakh tonnes of rice from India, Pakistan and Myanmar, said the adviser.
Bashir Uddin assured that there would be no crisis of rice till April as a full season of Aman was going on now. There has been no inconsistency of any product so far.
Seeking cooperation from the reporters to take actions against syndicates who manipulate the rice market, he said that there was no crisis of the rice market now but the rice price hiked slightly due to the weather, flood and other issues.
Warning of strict action against the manipulators, he hoped that the rice market would be stable soon.
He said distribution of rice to 6.3 million families who hold TCB smart cards would begin this week and 5.0 million families would also get rice at lower price under the Food-friendly Programme.
Replying to a query, adviser Bashir Uddin said they scrapped 3.7 million smart cards due to corruption as one more member from the same family managed cards through forgery.
"We want to add another 3.7 million cards. If it's possible to increase it from one crore by bringing transparency in procurement and marketing, we will do that too," he said.