New Delhi: Allowing e-commerce companies to sell all items, including non-essential items like laptops and refrigerators, in orange and green zones will provide relief to people and help millions of small and medium businesses and traders to jump-start their businesses amid the lockdown, industry executives said.
Traders' body CAIT, however, argued that e-commerce companies were misinterpreting MHA guidelines and "twisting (them) in their favour to misguide the various state governments and authorities and to create unnecessary confusion".
The government has now extended the lockdown till May 17 with a ban on air travel, trains and inter-state road transport. It, however, gave some relaxations for various business activities and people's movement within areas with limited or no COVID-19 cases. Under the latest rules, e-commerce activities in red zones are permitted only for essential goods during the third phase of lockdown.
"We welcome the government's decision to allow e-commerce in orange and green zones to serve people safely with products that they need and have not been able to access due to the lockdown. Millions of small and medium businesses and traders will now be able to jump-start their businesses and livelihoods across their workforce," an Amazon India spokesperson said.
The spokesperson said the company will focus on maintaining the "sanctity of the new guidelines around the red zones".
The company urged the government to consider the positive role e-commerce can play to get customers all priority products they need in the red zones as well, enabling a stronger economic support for the small businesses while prioritising safety.
However, traders' body CAIT argued that e-commerce companies were misinterpreting MHA guidelines.
"It is unfortunate that the e-commerce companies have become habitual offenders in misinterpreting MHA guidelines and twisting it in their favour to misguide the various state governments and authorities and to create unnecessary confusion," the Confederation of All India Traders Secretary General Praveen Khandelwal said.
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He added that while it is quite clear that e-commerce will be allowed to operate in red zones for essential goods, there is no mention of allowing e-commerce to deliver non-essentials in orange or green zones.
"Therefore, the sinister campaign of certain e-commerce companies for allowing them to deal in non-essential commodities is ill-founded and not withstand with the guidelines of MHA. The intention of the government is very clear to allow e-commerce to deliver essential goods only and nowhere in the guidelines, there is any provision which allows them to deliver non-essential commodities in other zones," he said.
The latest rules allow all standalone shops, neighbourhood shops and shops in residential complexes to remain open in urban areas, without any distinction of essential and non-essential.