Region takes about a third of all Indian fruit shipment and quarter of vegetables sold abroad; consignments from other states could face ban, too, if virus not contained.
With Kerala continuing to battle the infectious and deadly Nipah virus , all fruit and vegetables from the state have been banned in the majority of nations across the Arabian Gulf. The region is India's largest export market. Nipah has claimed 17 lives till now.
Last week, the United Arab
Emirates and Bahrain had ordered complete import restriction on fruit
and vegetables from Kerala. Over this weekend, Saudi Arabia, Qatar
and Kuwait also announced officially that import in both categories
would stop till further notice.
Since most countries in
the region have similar and closely knit Customs rules, media reports
from Oman suggest it might also follow.
The brain-damaging Nipah
virus appeared in Kerala early last
month. It is contagious and there is no vaccine for it. The natural
host of the virus is a fruit bat of the Pteropodidae family,
according to the World Health Organization. As a result, major
importing nations are now wary of produce grown in Kerala and have
also issued severe travel advisories against visiting the state. The
timing is expected to hit the southern state hard, as fruit export
generally swells in the hot month of Ramzan, currently on.
“Right now, it is
difficult for Customs inspections at ports to find out whether any
consignment is infected, since the foods do not show any physical
signs. Other Indian states might come under the restriction if the
virus spreads," said Ali Shaaban Balah, acting chief of the
plant protection & quarantine section at the ministry of works,
municipalities and urban planning in the government of Bahrain.
The Gulf region is India’s
largest market for fruit and vegetables, with the UAE being the
single biggest importing nation on both counts. Export to the nations
in the Gulf cumulatively make about 35 per cent of all fruit shipment
and nearly a quarter of all vegetable ones from India, according to
data from the commerce ministry.
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