Dharamshala shopkeepers protest trade licence fee, demand withdrawal

ANI April 12, 2025 142 views

Dharamshala's shopkeepers have launched a united protest against the Municipal Corporation's new trade licence fee. The traders argue that the additional licensing is unnecessary, as they are already registered under existing laws. Shopkeepers claim the corporation is imposing arbitrary charges without providing basic amenities like animal control or market infrastructure. The demonstration reflects growing frustration between local businesses and municipal authorities, with traders vowing to continue their agitation until the fee is withdrawn.

"MC officials are forcing us to obtain this licence which is wrong" - Rajesh Verma, Local Shopkeeper
Dharamshala, April 12: Scores of shopkeepers in Dharamshala shut their businesses and staged a protest on Thursday against the Municipal Corporation's decision to impose a trade license fee, calling it unnecessary and exploitative.

Key Points

1

Traders unanimously shut shops in protest against new licensing requirement

2

Municipal Corporation accused of exploitative fee collection

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Shopkeepers demand rollback of trade licence order

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Lack of basic municipal amenities highlighted

Organised by the Vyopar Mandal Dharamshala, the demonstration saw traders raising slogans against local authorities and elected representatives while demanding an immediate rollback of the order.

The protesting shopkeepers argued that they are already registered under the Shop and Establishment Act and questioned the rationale behind a new licensing requirement. They warned that such re-registration measures would only burden small traders without offering any tangible benefit in return. In a show of unity, shops across the market area remained closed as a form of dissent.

Rajesh Verma, a local shopkeeper participating in the protest, told ANI, "The MC officials are forcing us to obtain this licence which is wrong as we are already registered under the relevant law. They just want to gain money from the shopkeeper in the form of this trade licence. This license will not benefit the shopkeeper in anyway as it is written on the document that it's not a government paper and we cannot use it anywhere."

Shopkeepers further accused the Municipal Corporation of failing to provide basic amenities despite collecting various charges already. Verma said, "MC Dharamshala is already collecting money from us through various means but they are not providing any facilities. We are already facing problems of stray animals for which MC officials are doing nothing. There are no toilets in the market. So instead of imposing new rules they should do welfare activities."

The protest highlights a growing tension between traders and the local administration, with business owners expressing frustration over policies they see as arbitrary and insensitive to ground realities. The traders have vowed to continue their agitation unless the Municipal Corporation revokes the trade license fee mandate.

Reader Comments

P
Priya S.
Fully support the shopkeepers! The MC should focus on improving facilities instead of creating unnecessary paperwork. Where are our tax rupees going if not for basic amenities? 🤔
R
Rahul K.
While I sympathize with the traders, I wonder if there's more to this story. Maybe the MC has valid reasons for the new license? The article only presents one side.
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Anjali M.
The stray animal problem in Dharamshala market is terrible! I stopped shopping there because of this. MC should fix existing issues before adding new fees. Good on the shopkeepers for speaking up! 👏
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Sunil D.
As a small business owner in another city, I feel their pain. Government keeps inventing new ways to squeeze money from us while providing zero support. Solidarity from Delhi!
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Neha P.
The protest was peaceful and well-organized when I passed by. Hope the MC listens - Dharamshala's charm comes from these small shops. Don't drive them out with endless fees!
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Vikram J.
While I support the traders' cause, shutting shops hurts local customers too. Maybe they could find other ways to protest without inconveniencing regular people who depend on these shops?

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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