Agitating jewellers and bullion traders called on Congress President Sonia Gandhi on Friday to press for their demand for removal of excise duty on unbranded jewellery.
Gandhi, he said, "has assured us that she will forward our demands to Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee for further action".
Ahead of the meeting of jewellers with Gandhi, the Congress had asked the government to look into the demands of jewellers, who have been agitating for more than 20 days.
"Congress has asked the government to consider the demand of jewellers sympathetically," AICC General Secretary and media department chief Janardhan Dwivedi said.
Bullion traders and jewellers are protesting since the presentation of the Budget which had imposed excise duty on unbranded jewellery, raised customs duty on gold and proposed TDS requirement on sale of jewellery.
The representatives of the jewellery associations have also met Mukherjee yesterday to press for their demand for removal of duties on gold and unbranded jewellery. They met the minister again on Friday.
Mukherjee, while replying to a debate on Budget in Lok Sabha last month, had assured the jewellers that he would consider their demands but ruled out reduction in customs duty on gold, which was doubled to 4 per cent.
Various jewellers associations, including Bullion Traders Association, Market Sarafa Association, and diamond traders have been on strike since March 17.
Mukherjee in his Budget for 2012-13 had imposed 1 per cent excise duty on all unbranded jewellery and doubled the import duty to 4 per cent on gold. He also announced that quoting of PAN card would be mandatory for purchase of jewellery worth more than Rs 200,000.
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