Tariffs could be abolished by 2012
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Six Asian nations, led by India and Thailand, have created a free-trade zone, but Bangladesh refused to sign the deal over compensation issues.
India, Burma, Sri Lanka and Thailand pledged to boost investment and lower costs in a free-trade zone by 2017.
Bhutan and Nepal will join the group, known as BIMST-EC (Bangladesh, India,
Myanmar, Sri Lanka and Thailand - Economic Cooperation) at a later date.
Bangladesh fears lower tariffs may hurt its manufacturing.
It also said the cabinet would have to approve the agreement.
July meeting
"Our point was in the South Asian Free Trade Agreement, we
have that issue [compensation] already accepted by most of the
members. We wanted to follow the same pattern," Bangladeshi
Foreign Affairs Minister Morshed Khan told Reuters news agency.
"As soon as the issues are addressed and the procedural matter [cabinet approval] is over, we'll be ready to
sign."
Other countries agreed to work to calm Bangladesh's fears before
the leaders of the seven nations meet in Bangkok in July.
"Of course, officials concerned will have to get together
and find a way to deal with the concern of Bangladesh," said Thai
Foreign Ministry spokesman Sihasak Phuangketkeow.
The free-trade pact, if implemented, would span South Asia,
which has a population of more than 1.3 billion and South-east
Asia, home to 500 million people.
"By spanning two important regions, BIMST-EC is the logical
linking mechanism to bring together various interlocking pieces
of the jigsaw puzzle that is Asia," said Thai Foreign Minister
Surakiart Sathirathai at the beginning of the meeting.
Slightly better off India, Sri Lanka and Thailand plan to charge no tariffs on each others' goods and services by July 2012, five years ahead of Bangladesh, Burma, Nepal and Bhutan.
The group also discussed creating a natural gas pipeline and the possibility that Burma could build a deep sea port on its south-west coast.