98-33504. Establishment of an Export Visa Arrangement for Certain Cotton, Wool, Man-Made Fiber, Silk Blend and Other Vegetable Fiber Textiles and Textile Products Produced or Manufactured in Cambodia  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 243 (Friday, December 18, 1998)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 70110-70112]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-33504]
    
    
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    COMMITTEE FOR THE IMPLEMENTATION OF TEXTILE AGREEMENTS
    
    
    Establishment of an Export Visa Arrangement for Certain Cotton, 
    Wool, Man-Made Fiber, Silk Blend and Other Vegetable Fiber Textiles and 
    Textile Products Produced or Manufactured in Cambodia
    
    December 14, 1998.
    AGENCY: Committee for the Implementation of Textile Agreements (CITA).
    
    ACTION: Issuing a directive to the Commissioner of Customs establishing 
    export visa requirements.
    
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    EFFECTIVE DATE: January 1, 1999.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Roy Unger, International Trade 
    Specialist, Office of Textiles and Apparel, U.S. Department of 
    Commerce, (202) 482-4212.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
        Authority: Section 204 of the Agricultural Act of 1956, as 
    amended (7 U.S.C. 1854); Executive Order 11651 of March 3, 1972, as 
    amended.
    
        Pursuant to exchange of notes dated March 11 and August 8, 1997, 
    the Governments of the United States and Cambodia agreed to establish a 
    new Export Visa Arrangement for certain cotton, wool, man-made fiber, 
    silk blend and other vegetable fiber textiles and textile products in 
    Categories 200-239, 300-369, 400-469, 600-670 and 800-899, produced or 
    manufactured in Cambodia and exported from Cambodia on and after 
    January 1, 1999. Products exported during the period January 1, 1999 
    through January 31, 1999 shall not be denied entry for lack of a visa. 
    All
    
    [[Page 70111]]
    
    products exported on and after February 1, 1999 must be accompanied by 
    an appropriate export visa.
        A description of the textile and apparel categories in terms of HTS 
    numbers is available in the CORRELATION: Textile and Apparel Categories 
    with the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (see Federal 
    Register notice 62 FR 66057, published on December 17, 1997). 
    Information regarding the 1999 CORRELATION will be published in the 
    Federal Register at a later date.
        Interested persons are advised to take all necessary steps to 
    ensure that textile products that are entered into the United States 
    for consumption, or withdrawn from warehouse for consumption, will meet 
    the visa requirements set forth in the letter published below to the 
    Commissioner of Customs.
    Troy H. Cribb,
    Chairman, Committee for the Implementation of Textile Agreements.
    
    Committee for the Implementation of Textile Agreements
    December 14, 1998.
    
    Commissioner of Customs,
    Department of the Treasury, Washington, DC 20229.
    
        Dear Commissioner: Pursuant to section 204 of the Agricultural 
    Act of 1956, as amended (7 U.S.C. 1854); Executive Order 11651 of 
    March 3, 1972, as amended; and the Export Visa Arrangement, effected 
    by exchange of notes dated March 11 and August 8, 1997, between the 
    Governments of the United States and Cambodia, you are directed to 
    prohibit, effective on January 1, 1999, entry into the Customs 
    territory of the United States (i.e., the 50 states, the District of 
    Columbia and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico) for consumption and 
    withdrawal from warehouse for consumption of cotton, wool, man-made 
    fiber, silk blend and other vegetable fiber textiles and textile 
    products in Categories 200-239, 300-369, 400-469, 600-670 and 800-
    899, produced or manufactured in Cambodia and exported from Cambodia 
    on and after January 1, 1999 for which the Government of Cambodia 
    has not issued an appropriate export visa fully described below. 
    Should additional categories, merged categories or part categories 
    become subject to import quota, the merged or part category(s) 
    automatically shall be included in the coverage of this visa 
    arrangement. Merchandise in the category(s) exported on or after the 
    date the category(s) becomes subject to import quotas shall require 
    a visa. Products exported during the period January 1, 1999 through 
    January 31, 1999 shall not be denied entry for lack of an export 
    visa. All products exported on and after February 1, 1999 must be 
    accompanied by an appropriate export visa.
        A visa must accompany each commercial shipment of the 
    aforementioned textile products. A circular stamped marking in blue 
    ink will appear on the front of the original commercial invoice or 
    successor document. The original visa shall not be stamped on 
    duplicate copies of the invoice. The original invoice with the 
    original visa stamp will be required to enter the shipment into the 
    United States. Duplicates of the invoice and/or visa may not be used 
    for this purpose.
        Each visa stamp shall include the following information:
        1. The visa number. The visa number shall be in the standard 
    nine digit letter format, beginning with one numeric digit for the 
    last digit of the year of export, followed by the two character 
    alpha code specified by the International Organization for 
    Standardization (ISO) (the code for the Cambodia is ``KH''), and a 
    six digit numerical serial number identifying the shipment; e.g., 
    9KH123456.
        2. The date of issuance. The date of issuance shall be the day, 
    month and year on which the visa was issued.
        3. The original signature and the printed name of the issuing 
    official authorized by the Government of Cambodia.
        4. The correct category(s), merged category(s), part 
    category(s), quantity(s) and unit(s) of quantity of the shipment in 
    the unit(s) of quantity provided for in the U.S. Department of 
    Commerce Correlation and in the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the 
    United States, annotated or successor documents shall be reported in 
    the spaces provided within the visa stamp (e.g., ``Cat. 340--510 
    DOZ'').
        Quantities must be stated in whole numbers. Decimals or 
    fractions will not be accepted. Visaed quantities are rounded to the 
    closest whole number if the quantity exported exceeds one whole 
    unit, but is less than the next whole unit. Half units are rounded 
    up. If the quantity visaed is less than one unit, the shipment is 
    rounded upwards to one unit. Merged category quota merchandise may 
    be accompanied by either the appropriate merged category visa or the 
    correct category visa corresponding to the actual shipment. For 
    example, quota Category 347/348 may be visaed as ``Category 347/
    348'' or if the shipment consists solely of Category 347 
    merchandise, the shipment may be visaed as ``Category 347'' but not 
    as ``Category 348.''
        U.S. Customs shall not permit entry if the shipment does not 
    have a visa, or if the visa number, date of issuance, signature, 
    category, quantity or units of quantity are missing, incorrect, 
    illegible, or have been crossed out or altered in any way. If the 
    quantity indicated on the visa is less than that of the shipment, 
    entry shall not be permitted. If the quantity indicated on the visa 
    is more than that of the shipment, entry shall be permitted and only 
    the amount entered shall be charged to any applicable quota.
        The complete name and address of a company(s) actually involved 
    in the manufacturing process of the textile product covered by the 
    visa shall be provided on the textile visa document.
        If the visa is not acceptable then a new correct visa or a visa 
    waiver must be presented to the U.S. Customs Service before any 
    portion of the shipment will be released. A visa waiver may be 
    issued by the U.S. Department of Commerce at the request of the 
    Government of Cambodia through its Embassy in Washington, DC. The 
    waiver, if used, only waives the requirement to present a visa with 
    the shipment. It does not waive the quota requirements. Visa waivers 
    will only be issued for classification purposes or for one-time 
    special purpose shipments that are not part of an ongoing commercial 
    enterprise.
        If the visaed invoice is deficient, the U.S. Customs Service 
    will not return the original document after entry, but will provide 
    a certified copy of that visaed invoice for use in obtaining a new 
    correct original visaed invoice, or a visa waiver.
        If import quotas are in force, U.S. Customs Service shall charge 
    only the actual quantity in the shipment to the correct category 
    limit. If a shipment from Cambodia has been allowed entry into the 
    commerce of the United States with either an incorrect visa or no 
    visa, and redelivery is requested but cannot be made, the shipment 
    will be charged to the correct category limit whether or not a 
    replacement visa or waiver is provided.
        Merchandise imported for the personal use of the importer and 
    not for resale, regardless of value, and properly marked commercial 
    sample shipments valued at U.S. $800 or less do not require an 
    export visa for entry and shall not be charged to existing quota 
    levels.
        A facsimile of the visa stamp is enclosed.
        The Committee for the Implementation of Textile Agreements has 
    determined that these actions fall within the foreign affairs 
    exception to the rulemaking provisions of 5 U.S.C. 553(a)(1). This 
    letter will be published in the Federal Register.
        Sincerely,
    Troy H. Cribb,
    Chairman, Committee for the Implementation of Textile Agreements.
    
    BILLING CODE 3510-DR-F
    
    [[Page 70112]]
    
    [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN18DE98.000
    
    
    
    Export Visa Stamp for Cambodia
    
    [FR Doc. 98-33504 Filed 12-17-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3510-DR-C
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
1/1/1999
Published:
12/18/1998
Department:
Committee for the Implementation of Textile Agreements
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Issuing a directive to the Commissioner of Customs establishing export visa requirements.
Document Number:
98-33504
Dates:
January 1, 1999.
Pages:
70110-70112 (3 pages)
PDF File:
98-33504.pdf