New Delhi, Jan 25 : The Confederation of All India Traders (CAIT) in a
communication sent to Union Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal demanded
immediate action against e-commerce entities including Amazon, Flipkart,
Zomato, Swiggy and others."It is a case of daylight robbery of
e-commerce entities in India and therefore demand immediate action
against the erring e-commerce portals and online mechanism providers,"
CAIT said.
"It is a case of daylight robbery of e-commerce entities in India and, therefore demands immediate action against the erring e-commerce portals and online mechanism providers," CAIT said.
CAIT National President B.C. Bhartia and Secretary General Praveen Khandelwal in a communication to Goyal said that e-commerce entities conducting business in India including Amazon, Flipkart and others are highly violating the mandatory conditions spelled out in above Acts.
Bhartia and Khandelwal said that Rule 10 of Legal Metrology (Packaged Commodities) Rules, 2011 provide that e-commerce entities should have to display name and address of the manufacturer, name of the country of origin, common/generic name of the product, net quantity, best before/use by date (if applicable), maximum retail price, dimensions of the commodity, etc.
This rule was introduced in June 2017 and provided a transition period of six months thereby its implementation from January 1,2018 but even after a lapse of three years, the above rules are not being complied by e-commerce companies prominently by Amazon, Flipkart, etc.
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Failure
to make declarations as above will amount to selling non-standard
packages and will invite penalty under the above said Act, including
fine or imprisonment or both, CAIT said.
Both trade leaders further said that similar obligations were imposed on e-commerce food business operators vide guidelines issued by the Food Safety & Standards Authority (FSSAI) on February 2,2017.
"But such FBOs like Zomato, Swiggy, etc. are not complying with the above rules," CAIT said.
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Bhartia
and Khandelwal said that under Rule 4(2) of the Consumer Protection (E
Commerce) Rules, 2020, it is provided that every e-commerce entity shall
provide the following information in a clear and accessible manner on
its platform, displayed prominently to its users, namely, legal name of
the e-commerce entity, principal geographic address of its headquarters
and all branches, name and details of its website, and contact details
like email address, fax, landline and mobile numbers of customer care as
well as of grievance office. Similar provisions are also spelled out in
Press Note 2 of the FDI Policy, 2016.
CAIT said no e-commerce entity has appointed a Nodal Officer as also complying with above provisions. Important rights of the consumers are being violated as they are not aware of the seller or description of the product at the time of purchase of products from e-commerce portals.
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