<p> Footwear manufacturers and allied industries from 13 states held a protest, dissenting against the Central government's imposition of BIS quality certification on all kinds of footwear.</p>.<p>The nationwide protest was organised by the All India MSME Footwear Council on Wednesday.</p>.<p>The state-level protest was held at Modern Industrial Estate in Kozhikode, a statement said here on Thursday.</p>.Farmers in Punjab begin three-day 'rail roko' protest.<p>As many as 400 small-scale footwear units also took part in the protest across Kerala.</p>.<p>Industry leaders and MSME owners pointed out that the government's decision was neither practical nor scientific, it said.</p>.<p>"The standards are set without considering the manufacturing/production process, types of raw materials used, and categories of footwear products. This makes the implementation of BIS standards unrealistic," VKC Razak, National Chairman, All India MSME Footwear Council, said.</p>.<p>The protestors demanded a conclusive order from the government that relieves the MSME units from the ambit of mandatory BIS norms.</p>.<p>They also requested to exclude general-purpose sandals, slippers, school shoes, and fancy footwear from the mandatory rule due to their complex production process.</p>.<p>Thousands of people, including factory owners and employees participated in the 'Protest Day' observation in front of their respective factories in different states, the statement said. </p>
<p> Footwear manufacturers and allied industries from 13 states held a protest, dissenting against the Central government's imposition of BIS quality certification on all kinds of footwear.</p>.<p>The nationwide protest was organised by the All India MSME Footwear Council on Wednesday.</p>.<p>The state-level protest was held at Modern Industrial Estate in Kozhikode, a statement said here on Thursday.</p>.Farmers in Punjab begin three-day 'rail roko' protest.<p>As many as 400 small-scale footwear units also took part in the protest across Kerala.</p>.<p>Industry leaders and MSME owners pointed out that the government's decision was neither practical nor scientific, it said.</p>.<p>"The standards are set without considering the manufacturing/production process, types of raw materials used, and categories of footwear products. This makes the implementation of BIS standards unrealistic," VKC Razak, National Chairman, All India MSME Footwear Council, said.</p>.<p>The protestors demanded a conclusive order from the government that relieves the MSME units from the ambit of mandatory BIS norms.</p>.<p>They also requested to exclude general-purpose sandals, slippers, school shoes, and fancy footwear from the mandatory rule due to their complex production process.</p>.<p>Thousands of people, including factory owners and employees participated in the 'Protest Day' observation in front of their respective factories in different states, the statement said. </p>