Customs Tariff (Determination of Origin of Goods Under Agreement on SAARC Pref) Rules 1995.
CUSTOMS TARIFF (DETERMINATION OF ORIGIN OF GOODS UNDER THE
AGREEMENT ON SAARC PREFERENTIAL TRADING ARRANGEMENT) RULES, 1995
- Short title and commencement
- Application
- Definitions
- Determination of Origin
- Claim at the time of importation
THE SCHEDULE
- Originating products
- Wholly produced or obtained
- Not wholly produced or obtained
- Cumulative rules of origin.
- Direct consignment
- Treatment of packing.
- Certificate of Origin.
-
In conformity with Article 15 of the SAPTA and national legislations
- Review
- Special criteria percentage
CUSTOMS TARIFF (DETERMINATION OF ORIGIN OF GOODS UNDER THE
AGREEMENT ON SAARC PREFERENTIAL TRADING ARRANGEMENT) RULES, 1995
Notification No. 73/95-Cus. (N.T.), dated 7-12-1995 as amended by Notification
No. 7/97-Cus. (N.T.), dated 1-3-1997.
In exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (1) of section 5 of the
Customs Tariff Act, 1975 (51 of 1975), the Central Government hereby makes the
following rules, namely :-
- Short title and commencement. -
- These rules may be called the Customs Tariff (Determination of
Origin of Goods under the Agreement on SAARC Preferential Trading
Arrangement) Rules, 1995.
- They shall come into force on the date of their publication in the
Official Gazette.
- Application. - These rules shall apply to products
consigned from any Contracting State.
- Definitions. - In these rules, unless the context
otherwise requires -
- "SAPTA" means the Agreement on SAARC Preferential Trading
Arrangement, signed at Dhaka, Bangladesh on the llth day of April, 1993;
- "Contracting State" means any Member State of SAARC listed in
Appendix I or Appendix II to the notification of the Government of India
in the Ministry of Finance (Department of Revenue) No. 15/97 - Customs,
dated 1st March,1997;
- "Preferential concession", in relation to any product means
the exemption granted under the notification of the Government of India
in the Ministry of Finance (Department of Revenue) No. 15/97 - Customs,
dated 1st March, 1997;
- Words and expressions used in these rules and not defined, but
defined in the Customs Act, 1962 (52 of 1962), shall have the meanings,
respectively, assigned to them in that Act.
- Determination of Origin. - No product shall be deemed
to be the produce or manufacture of a Contracting State unless the Assistant
Commissioner of Customs or Deputy Commissioner of Customs is satisfied that
the conditions specified in the Schedule to these rules are complied with in
relation to such products.
- Claim at the time of importation.
- The importer of the
products shall at the time of importation, -
- make a claim that the products are the produce or manufacture of the
Contracting State from which they are imported and such products are
eligible for preferential concession; and
- produce the evidence specified in the Schedule to these rules
THE SCHEDULE
(See Rules 4 and 5)
- Originating products. - Products covered by
preferential trading arrangements within the framework of the SAPTA imported
into the territory of a Contracting State from another Contracting State
which are consigned directly within the meaning of paragraph 5, hereof,
shall be eligible for preferential concessions if they conform to the origin
requirements under any one of the following conditions, namely :-
- products wholly produced or obtained in the exporting Contracting
State as denied in paragraph 2; or
- products not wholly produced or obtained, in the exporting
Contracting State, provided that the said products are eligible under
paragraph 4.
- Wholly produced or obtained.
- Within the meaning of
paragraph 1(a) the following shall be considered as wholly produced or
obtained in the exporting Contracting State, namely :-
- raw or mineral products extracted from its soil, its water or its
seabeds;
- agricultural products harvested there,
- animals born and raised there;
- products obtained from animals referred to in clause (c) above;
- products obtained by hunting or fishing conducted there;
- products of sea fishing and other marine products taken from the
high seas by its vessels;
- products processed and/or made on board its factory ships
exclusively from products referred to in clause (f) above;
- used articles collected there, fit only for the recovery of raw
materials;
- waste and scrap resulting from manufacturing operations conducted
there;
- goods produced there exclusively from the products referred to
in clauses (a) to (i) above.
- Not wholly produced or obtained.
-
- Within the meaning of paragraph 1 (b), products worked on or
processed as a result of which the total value of the materials, parts
or produce originating from non-Contracting States or of undetermined
origin used does not exceed 50 per cent of the f.o.b. value of the
products produced or obtained and the final process of manufacture is
performed within the territory of the exporting Contracting State shall
be eligible for preferential concessions subject to the provisions of
clause (c) of paragraph 3 and paragraph 4;
- Sectoral agreements;
- The value of the non-originating materials, parts or produce shall
be -
- the c.i.f. value at the time of importation of materials, parts
or produce where this can be proven; or
- the earliest ascertainable price paid for the materials, parts
or produce of undetermined origin in the territory of the
Contracting State where the working or processing takes place.
- Cumulative rules of origin. -
Products which comply
with origin requirements provided for in paragraph 1 and which are used by a
Contracting State as input for a finished product eligible for preferential
treatment by another Contracting State shall be considered as a product
originating in the territory of the Contracting State where working or
processing of the finished product has taken place provided the aggregate
content originating in the territory of the Contracting State is not less
than 60 per cent of its f.o.b. value.
- Direct consignment. - The following shall be considered
as directly consigned from the exporting Contracting State to the importing
Contracting State,namely :-
- if the products are transported without passing through the
territory of any non-Contracting State;
- the products whose transport involves transit through one or more
intermediate non-Contracting States with or without transhipment or
temporary storage in such countries :
Provided that -
- the transit entry is justified for geographical reason or by
considerations related exclusively to transport requirements;
- the products have not entered into trade or consumption there;
and
- the products have not undergone any operation there other than
unloading and reloading or any operation required to keep them in
good condition.
- Treatment of packing.- When determining the origin of
products, packing shall be considered as forming a whole with the product it
contains, unless packing has to be treated separately under the national
legislation.
- Certificate of Origin.- Products eligible for
preferential concessions shall be supported by a Certificate of Origin, in
the form annexed, issued by an authority designated by the government of the
exporting Contracting State and notified to the other Contracting States in
accordance with the Certification Procedures mentioned below the form
annexed.
-
-
In conformity with Article 15 of the SAPTA and national
legislations, any Contracting State may prohibit importation of
products containing any inputs originating from States with which it
does not have economic and commercial relations.
- Contracting States will do their best to cooperate in order to
specify origin of inputs in the Certificate of Origin.
- Review. - These Rules may be reviewed as and when
necessary upon request of one-third of the Contracting States and may be
open to such modifications as may be agreed upon.
- Special criteria percentage. - Products originating in
Least Developed Contracting States can be allowed a favourable 10 percentage
points applied to the percentage established in paragraphs 3 and 4. Thus,
for paragraph 3, the percentage would not exceed 60 per cent, and for
paragraph 4, the percentage would not be less than 50 per cent.