DRI Stops Export of 27,000 Vivo Phones in Noida
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DRI
Alleges inside info to Stop Shipment as India Woos China MSME to Set-up Mobile
Phone Parts in India
The smartphones,
manufactured by Vivo's India unit, are being held up
at the New Delhi airport by the Finance Ministry's Revenue Intelligence Unit.
Central authorities
have prevented Vivo from exporting some 27,000 smartphones for more than a week
in a setback to the Chinese company's plan to ship devices from India to
neighbouring markets.
The smartphones,
manufactured by Vivo Communications Technology Co.'s India unit, are being held
up at the New Delhi airport by the revenue intelligence unit, a branch of the
Finance Ministry, over an alleged mis-declaration of the device models and
their value, multiple people familiar with the matter said. The shipment is
worth nearly $15 million, according to one of the people. The people declined
to be named as the matter is not public.
An industry lobby
group called the government agency's actions "unilateral and
preposterous."
"We request your
kind and urgent intervention to stop this unfortunate course of action,"
Pankaj Mohindroo, the Chairman of India Cellular and
Electronics Association, wrote in a Dec. 2 letter to the top bureaucrat in the
tech ministry, which was reviewed by Bloomberg News.
The tensions between
India and China widened after the nations clashed at border in the summer of
2020. The centre has also intensified scrutiny of Chinese companies operating
in India including SAIC Motor Corp Ltd's MG Motor
India Pvt Ltd, and the local units of Xiaomi Corp. and ZTE Corp.
The blockage of Vivo's shipments at the airport is likely to unnerve other
Chinese smartphone players in the country as the central government is pushing
them to ramp up exports and build local supply chains. That could threaten
India's ambitious target of exporting electronics products worth $120 billion
by the end of March 2026.
To be sure, Vivo exported its first batch of India-made smartphones in
early November to markets such as Saudi Arabia and Thailand. But the latest
snag could cloud Vivo's future in the world's
second-biggest smartphone market, where the company is already under scrutiny
for alleged money laundering, a claim that has yet to be proven in court.