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After Ae Dil Hai Mushkil Row, MNS Now Wants Traders To 'Sacrifice' Their Business With Pakistan For The Nation

Cotton traders in Maharashtra are afraid of losing business of about ₹5,500 due to the ongoing tension.
File photo of MNS chief, Raj Thackeray.
Hindustan Times via Getty Images
File photo of MNS chief, Raj Thackeray.

MUMBAI -- Emboldened by its successful campaign against Bollywood film Ae Dil Hai Mushkil, MNS now wants traders to "sacrifice" their business with Pakistan for the sake of the "nation" even as cotton exporters today observed that the Raj Thackeray-led outfit's stand will affect the industry.

The stir by MNS against release of the Karan Johar film for featuring Pakistani actor Fawad Khan blew over yesterday following mediation by Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis in a tripartite meeting among Thackeray, Johar, and Producers' Guild president Mukesh Bhatt at the CM's residence here.

Banning 'Ae Dil Hai Mushkil' was an example to show that India has started to isolate Pakistan. Next comes trade.Shalini Thackeray, MNS

Exploiting the controversy to the hilt ahead of the Mumbai municipal corporation polls next year, Thackeray yesterday asked the filmmakers who had worked with Pakistani actors to contribute ₹5 crore as "prayaschit" (penance) money to the Army Welfare Fund.

MNS spokesperson Shalini Thackeray today demanded that the traders should sacrifice business for the sake of nation.

"Nation should be first. If jawans are sacrificing their lives (at border), why can't traders sacrifice their trade? Money making should be the secondary priority in case of Pakistan," she said here today.

"Pakistan has already violated the clauses of MFN status given by India. Now, it's high time that India isolate Pakistan, not only on cultural issues but on trade (front) as well. Banning the film [ADHM] was only to set an example that India has started to isolate Pak...next comes trade," she told PTI.

The senior leader said MNS will definitely play its role in ensuring that all kinds of trade with Pakistan are stopped.

"However, the government will have to play a major role as far as trade is concerned," she said.

Meanwhile, concerned over rising tensions between the two countries after the Uri attack coupled with aggressive posturing by MNS, the cotton traders said they are afraid of losing business to the tune of ₹5,500 crore with Pakistan.

Maharashtra is a major contributor in cotton manufacturing states, followed by Gujarat.

According to Sharadram Sejpal, spokesperson of Power Loom Association, India had placed an order to import 20,000 bales cotton from Pakistan in June as there was low production in the domestic market.

"Generally, we export cotton to Pakistan. But June period was bad. At a time when we are expecting a record breaking production (of cotton), MNS's stand against Pakistani actors has affected the cotton industry as well and powerloom industry will ultimately have to suffer," Sejpal said.

He demanded that the Raj Thackeray-led party should keep politics away from trade.

Reacting to this, Shalini said, "Cotton associations should themselves come up and stop exporting to Pak, instead of them banning our imports."

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.