Jun 18, 2014

120 கிலோ புகையிலை பறிமுதல்

அண்ணாநகர், ஜூன் 18:
கோயம்பேடு, அரும்பாக்கம் உள்ளிட்ட பகுதிகளில் தடை செய்யப்பட்ட புகையிலை பொருட்கள் பதுக்கி விற்பனை செய்யப்படுவதாக, உணவு பாதுகாப்பு துறை அதிகாரிகளுக்கு தகவல் கிடைத்தது. இதையடுத்து, சென்னை மாவட்ட உணவு பாதுகாப்பு துறை நியமன அலுவலர் டாக்டர் லட்சுமி நாராயணன் தலைமையில் உணவு பாதுகாப்பு அலுவலர்கள், கோயம்பேடு காளியம்மன் கோயில் ரோடு, 100 அடி சாலை, அரும்பாக்கம், எம்.எம்.டி.ஏ காலனி உள்ளிட்ட பகுதிகளில் ஆய்வு செய்தனர்.
அப்போது, கடைகள் மற்றும் குடோன்களில் பதுக்கி வைத்திருந்த 120 கிலோ எடையுள்ள புகையிலை பொருட்கள் பறிமுதல் செய்யப்பட்டன. அவற்றை கொடுங்கையூரில் உள்ள குப்பை கொட்டும் வளாகத்தில் பள்ளம் தோண்டி அழித்தனர்.

ஜெய்ப்பூரில் இருந்து ரயிலில் வந்த 15 லட்சம் ஆட்டிறைச்சி பறிமுதல்


சென்னை, ஜூன் 18:
ஜெய்ப்பூர்&சென்னை சென்ட்ரல் வாரம் இருமுறை எக்ஸ்பிரஸ் ரயில் நேற்று காலை 10 மணிக்கு சென்ட்ரலின் 4வது நடைமேடைக்கு வந்தது. சரக்குகள் வைக்கும் பெட்டியில் இருந்து துர்நாற்றம் வீசுவதை ரயில்வே போலீசார் இருவர் கண்டுபிடித்தனர். உடனடியாக அதிகாரிகளுக்கு தெரிவித்தனர். அங்கு வந்த இன்ஸ்பெக்டர்கள் அழகர்சாமி, புருஷோத்தமன், சப்இன்ஸ்பெக்டர்கள் சுப்பையா, நடராஜன் ஆகியோர் ரயில்வே ஊழியர்கள் உதவியுடன் பெட்டியை திறந்தனர். அதில் 48 பெட்டிகள் வைக்கப்பட்டிருந்தன. அந்த பெட்டிகளை திறந்து பார்த்தபோது ஒவ்வொரு பெட்டியிலும் தோலுரிக்கப்பட்ட முழு ஆடுகள் 2, 3 வைக்கப்பட்டிருந்தன.
மேலும் அந்த ஆட்டிறைச்சியில் அனுப்பப்பட்ட இடத்தின் சுகாதார அதிகாரி அளித்த முத்திரைகள் ஏதுமில்லை. மேலும் இறைச்சியை ரயிலில் கொண்டு வருவதற்கான பாதுகாப்பு விதிமுறையும் கடைபிடிக்கப்படவில்லை. கறியின் எடைக்கு ஏற்ப 2 மடங்கு ஐஸ் கட்டிகளை வைக்க வேண்டும். அதுவும் செய்யப்படவில்லை. இதனால் ஆட்டிறைச்சி கெட்டுப்போய் துர்நாற்றம் வீசிக் கொண்டிருந்தது.
ரயிலில் கொண்டு வரப்பட்ட ஆட்டிறைச்சி சென்னையில் சிந்தாதரிப்பேட்டையில் உள்ள கடைகளுக்கு அனுப்பப்படும். பின்னர் அங்கிருந்து நகரின் நட்சத்திர ஓட்டல்கள் உட்பட பல்வேறு ஓட்டல்களுக்கு அனுப்பி வைக்கப்படும். யார் பேருக்கு அனுப்பப்பட்டுள்ளது, அனுப்பியவர் யார், ஜெய்ப்பூரில் இருந்து அனுப்பப்பட்டதா இல்லை இடையில் ஆந்திராவில் இருந்து அனுப்பப்பட்டதா என்று அதிகாரிகள் விசாரிக்கின்றனர்.
மொத்தம் 48 பெட்டிகளில் இருந்த இறைச்சிகளின் எடை 3.3 டன். இதன் மதிப்பு சுமார் 15 லட்ச ரூபாய். பின்னர் அவற்றை சென்னை மாநகராட்சி சுகாதார ஆய்வாளர்கள் மீனாட்சிசுந்தரம், கமல்உசேன், ரவி ஆகியோரிடம் ஒப்படைத்தனர். அவர்கள் அதனை கொடுங்கையூரில் உள்ள குப்பை கிடங்கிற்கு கொண்டு சென்றனர். அங்கு இறைச்சியுடன் வேதிப்பொருட்களையும் கலந்து ஆழக் குழிவெட்டி புதைத்தனர்.

ஜெய்ப்பூர் ரயிலில் 3,300 கிலோ சுகாதாரமற்ற ஆட்டிறைச்சி

சென்னை: ஜெய்ப்பூர் - சென்னை வாராந்திர விரைவு ரயிலில் கொண்டு வரப்பட்ட, 3,300 கிலோ சுகாதாரமற்ற ஆட்டிறைச்சியை, சென்னை, மாநகராட்சியின் சுகாதாரத்துறையினர் பறிமுதல் செய்தனர். ஆட்டிறைச்சி யாருக்கு கொண்டு வரப்பட்டது என்பது குறித்து, ரயில்வே போலீசார் விசாரிக்கின்றனர்.
பார்சல் பொருட்கள்:
சென்னை சென்ட்ரல் ரயில் நிலையத்திற்கு, நேற்று காலை, 9:30 மணிக்கு ராஜஸ்தான் மாநிலம், ஜெய்ப்பூர் - சென்னை வாராந்திர விரைவு ரயில் வந்தது. அந்த ரயிலில் இருந்து, பார்சல் பொருட்கள் இறக்கப்பட்டன. ரயில் நிலைய பாதுகாப்பில் ஈடுபட்டிருந்த ரயில்வே போலீசார் மற்றும் ரயில்வே பாதுகாப்பு படையினர், சந்தேகத்திற்கு இடமான, சில பார்சல் பொருட்களை சோதனை செய்தனர். அதில், 47 பெட்டிகளில், சுகாதாரமற்ற ஆட்டிறைச்சி இருப்பது தெரிய வந்தது. இது குறித்து, சென்னை, மாநகராட்சியின் சுகாதாரத் துறை அதிகாரிகளுக்கு தகவல் அளித்தனர். மருத்துவர்கள் ரவீந்திரன், அமீர் உசேன் மற்றும் துப்புரவு ஆய்வாளர் மீனாட்சி சுந்தரம் ஆகியோர் கொண்ட குழு, ஆட்டு இறைச்சியை பரிசோதித்தது. பொதுவாக, ஒரு கிலோ ஆட்டிறைச்சியை, இரண்டு கிலோ ஐஸ் கட்டியில் பதப்படுத்தி கொண்டு வர வேண்டும். சுகாதாரமான ஆட்டிறைச்சி என்பதற்கான, சுகாதாரத் துறையின் சார்பில், முத்திரை இடப்பட்டிருக்க வேண்டும்; ஆடு வெட்டப்படும் இடத்தில், மருத்துவர் சான்றிதழ் பெற்றிருக்க வேண்டும் போன்ற, எந்தவொரு விதிமுறையும் இதில் பின்பற்றவில்லை.
அழித்து விடுவோம்:
ஒவ்வொரு பெட்டியிலும், 60 - 70 கிலோ என மொத்தம், 3,300 கிலோ சுகாதாரமற்ற ஆட்டிறைச்சியை, மாநகராட்சியின் சுகாதாரத்துறை அதிகாரிகள் கைப்பற்றினர். 'அதை, கொடுங்கையூர் குப்பை கிடங்கிற்கு கொண்டு சென்று, அழித்து விடுவோம்' என, தெரிவித்து சென்றனர். சென்னை, சிந்தாதிரிப்பேட்டை முகவரிக்கு அனுப்பப்பட்ட சுகாதாரமற்ற ஆட்டிறைச்சி பார்சல் குறித்து, ரயில்வே போலீசார் விசாரித்து வருகின்றனர். ஜெய்ப்பூரில், கிலோ, 150 ரூபாய்க்கு சுகாதாரமற்ற ஆட்டிறைச்சியை பெற்று, அதை 400 ரூபாய்க்கு மேல், சென்னையில் விற்று லாபம் பார்த்து வருகின்றனர். கடந்த ஆண்டுகளில், ரயில்களில் கொண்டு வரப்பட்ட சுகாதாரமற்ற ஆட்டிறைச்சியை, அவ்வப்போது போலீசார் பறிமுதல் செய்தனர்.
விதியை மீறி:
கெடுபிடி அதிகரித்ததை அடுத்து, ஆம்னி பஸ்களிலும், பார்சல் வாகனங்களிலும், விதியை மீறி, ஆட்டிறைச்சி கொண்டு சென்றனர். தற்போது, மீண்டும் ரயிலில் கொண்டு வரத் துவங்கியுள்ளனர்.வரும் நாட்களில், ரயில்களில் வரும் பார்சல் பொருட்களை சோதனை செய்த பின்பே, பார்சல் பிரிவு அலுவலகங்களுக்கு அனுப்ப வேண்டும் என, பயணிகள் வேண்டுகோள் விடுத்துள்ளனர்.

DINAMANI NEWS


Rotten Mutton Seized in Central




3 tonnes of rotten meat seized at Central

CHENNAI: Corporation officials on Tuesday seized 3,300 kg of rotten meat from the Jaipur-Chennai Express at Chennai Central, bringing to light the transport and sale of such meat. Smugglers continue to bring and supply such meat in the city because of the lack of stringent action, say experts.
Corporation officials said the seized meat was meant for various eateries. "It appears to have come from Sikar in Rajasthan. But it was not packed with ice or preservatives," said an official.
Officials of the corporation and food safety department had seized several tonnes of rotten meat from trains coming from Andhra Pradesh and Rajasthan in the past one and a half years.
Sources say those bringing in such meat supply it to several traders, including those in Chintadripet. "Many eateries purchase the meat because it is cheaper than meat of animals slaughtered locally. Severalhotels continue to mix rotten meat along with low grade meat," alleged Chennai Mutton Merchants (retailers) Association general secretary M Anwar Basha Qureshi. He said the existing corporation slaughterhouses were in a poor condition. "We also want to set up more slaughterhouses in the city."
Tamil Nadu Hotels Association secretary R Srinivasan said hotels did not use rotten meat as it would affect their reputation. "Such meat is used by roadside shops and those located near Tasmac outlets."
Health experts fear the sale of rotten meat stored in unhygienic conditions could lead to outbreak of diseases. Consumption of such meat, they say, can cause gastrointestinal problems, especiallyfood poisoning.
The civic body regulates meat stalls under Sections 309 and 349 (21) of the Chennai CityMunicipal Corporation Act, 1919. Officials said butchers without licences under Section 309 of the Act will not be allowed to sell meat products.

Civic body seizes rotten meat

The Chennai Corporation on Tuesday seized 3.3 tonnes of rotten meat at Chennai Central railway station, after they were unloaded from the Jaipur Express.
The cheap pricing of such meat is the key reason for its popularity among small meat shops and hotels, said officials. Following the crackdown a few years ago by the Corporation, smuggling of rotten meat through rail reduced significantly. In the past few weeks, merchants have started using the rail route owing to a dip in monitoring. The civic body, in association with the food safety department, is planning to screen more than 1,000 licensed meat shops and create awareness on public health.
Crackdown on gutka
The food safety department on Tuesday also cracked down on illegal sale of gutka in Sowcarpet, Koyambedu, Arumbakkam and Saidapet, and seized one tonne of the product.

Use of adulterated tea rampant in Trichy stalls

TRICHY: It seems adulterated tea powder is still being widely used at several outlets in Trichy and Perambalur districts as efforts to trace the source of spurious stuff have so far failed. Food safety wing which conducted raids at some tea shops recently had found adulterated tea powder at a few shops.
Food safety wing officials also claimed that they have information that sub-standard tea powder is used in Manapparai which is on the outskirts of Trichy. "We have been trying to find out the manufacturers of such stuff. But they are operating secretly. We take our best effortsto stop spurious stuff from entering into Trichy district," said Dr A Ramakrishnan, designated officer of the food safety wing in Trichy.
Around 100 kg of adulterated tea powder was seized at Paadalur on Trichy border by the food safety wing in Perambalur district last week. They were found at some shops, including that of a tea powder distributor.
Tea-shop owners eyeing high margins use adulterated powder that harms tea drinkers. Last month, the food safety wing shad raided tea shops in Srirangam and seized sub-standard tea powder. Though, officials tried to find out the manufacturer, its origin remains a mystery.
"Acting on a tip-off we seized the adulterated tea powder. Preliminary tests confirmed the use of dye and iron fillings in tea. However, the concerned people challenged our tests claiming that they have original tea powder. We have taken samples and sent them for lab testing. Based on the lab reports, legal action will be initiated against them," said Dr A Pushparaj who is the designated officer of the food safety wing in Perambalur.
Consumption of adulterated tea will cause adverse health consequences in the long run.
Meanwhile, Dr Pushparaj advised people to take care and try to consume safe products.

FDA shuts down 25 eateries across State

PANJIM: The officials of Food & Drugs Administration have directed 25 eateries to stop operations as they were allegedly functioning in unhygienic conditions. These premises are located at Panjim, Margao, Vasco, Ponda, Anjuna, Mapusa and Bicholim.
The FDA had recently concluded cleanliness drive at 363 food serving establishments across the State. It has asked the errant establishment to rectify the unsanitary conditions. The FDA will once again conduct aninspection to ascertain that the directives are complied with. 
The drive from April 15 to June 5, also established that 98 premises were operating without valid food safetyregistrations and licenses, as mandated under Food Safety and Standards Act 2006 and Food Safety and Standard Rules 2011. The FDA has directed these premises to obtain the licenses within 10 days failing which not only their activities will be shut down but the respective owners will also face legal action. 
FDA Director Salim Veljee said the drive was carried out to ensure that all food serving establishments including restaurants, road-side food stalls, kiosks and other eateries follow hygiene practices, especially in the wake of monsoon season and resulting diseases. The drive will continue, Veljee said.

License of M/S Ajay Traders seized for selling adulterated oil

Imphal, June 17 2014: As a follow up action, the license given to M/S Ajay Traders, Thangal Bazar which was found selling adulterated cooking oil was seized by an order issued by Food Safety Officer S Bimolakumari under the directive of Chief Medical Officer, Imphal West on June 16 .
The order was issued under Food Safety & Standard Act, 2006 (34 of 2006) and Sub-Regulation (4) of Regulation 218 .
M/S Ajay Traders was awarded with the license no 11611009000067 on February 4, 2013 .
It may be recalled that, a team led by two Food SafetyOfficers conducted raid at the godown of the companylocated at Mantripukhri on June 9 and found adulterated cooking oil worth Rs 60 lakhs.
Since then the godown and the shop have been sealedunder Food Safety & Standard Act.
A complaint was also filed to police in connection with thecase.
So far, owner of M/S Ajay Traders identified as Molchand Pawar (52) could not be arrested as he already left for his hometown in Rajasthan for medical treatment.

West Bengal govt taking steps against adulerated milk

June 17: The West Bengal government is taking steps to stop production and distribution of adulterated milk in the state, animal resources development minister Swapan Debnath told the assembly on Tuesday. 
Replying during the question hour, he said that the department had been strictly implementing the Food Safety Act with the help of health officials of the district. 
Debnath said that several vans containing adulterated milk had been confiscated and four persons had been sent to jail. He said that the Trinamool Congress government had been steadily increasing the prices of milk purchased at the various collection centres across the state. 
However, he regretted that several farmers had been taking benefits from the government but selling their milk to Amul. Debnath said that steps were being taken to stop this practice. 
Replying to supplementaries, he said that Mother Dairy had posted a profit of Rs seven crore for the first time last fiscal.

Health officials raid 61 shops

As part of the anti-tobacco drive in the city, the district health officials on Monday conducted raids on shops across Kochi.
The health officials, on instructions from the District Collector, raided 61 shops and detained six persons, who were later handed over to the police. The arrested have been identified as Narayan Das, Sanjay, Sonal Kumar, Ravi Prasad, Narendran and Rasheed. A fine of Rs.1,600 was collected from the outlets found violating the laws.
Meanwhile, three eateries were shut down for grave violations of food safety standards and notices were issued to 229 restaurants that were found flouting basic hygiene norms in raids conducted on Monday.

Akshaya Patra looks at 50,000 meals a day

The Akshaya Patra Foundation’s upgraded kitchen will help it conform to national standards of food safety. 
The foundation’s upgraded kitchen promises more hygienic food
With the promise of cleaner and hygienic food, the Akshaya Patra Foundation, which supplies mid-day meals for 147 government schools in the district, will open its upgraded kitchen here on Tuesday.
Addressing presspersons on Monday, Karunya Sagar Dasa, president of the Foundation in the city, said the changes to their kitchen include granite flooring, more automation in cooking and handling of food, among others. Though this won’t augment the 23,000 meals-a-day capacity of the kitchen, the changes would help the kitchen conform to national standards of food safety, he said.
The upgradation is a part of the larger plan for the Foundation to aim for 50,000 meals a day. “The current kitchen is just 3,000 square feet and has reached its saturation point. We will need to get land for a bigger kitchen if our goal is to be met,” said Mr. Sagar.
The limitation of the current kitchen sees just one government school in Puttur being added to the roster of the Foundation which has been functioning in the district since 2006.
On Tuesday, B. Ramanath Rai, Minister for Forests, Ecology and Environment, will flag off a new vehicle for transportation of food as well as throw open the upgraded (phase II) kitchen. A total of 10 toppers and meritorious students would also be handed awards on the occasion, said the organisation.

Food trucks are safer than restaurants, study says

The Thai-fusion Yum Yum Bowls food truck at UCLA.UCLA / Alison Hewitt If you’re worried about getting food poisoning, avoiding street food isn’t the answer. According to a new study, food trucks are as safe as or safer than...Paylaş

The Thai-fusion Yum Yum Bowls food truck at UCLA.UCLA 

If you’re worried about getting food poisoning, avoiding street food isn’t the answer.
According to a new study, food trucks are as safe as or safer than restaurants.
A report called Street Eats, Safe Eats from theInstitute for Justice concluded that food trucks and carts tend to receive less health and safety violations than restaurants do. The study compared food trucks to restaurants by analyzing health department reviews of more than 260,000 eateries in seven major U.S. cities — Boston, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Louisville, Miami, Seattle and Washington, D.C.
The group made the direct comparison between brick and motor places and trucks because the study specifically picked cities where “mobile vendors are covered by the same health codes and inspection regimes.” The authors of the report also controlled other factors like the day of the week and the season to help account for variations in weather and pests.
The popularity of food trucks has exploded over the past several years, yet operators have faced regulations and rules that put restrictions on when and where they can do business.
The Virginia-based libertarian law firm institute opposes what it calls "burdensome" regulations, including bans or restrictions on food trucks. 
Authors of the study say that "burdensome regulations proposed in the name of food safety, such as outright bans and limits on when and where mobile vendors may work, do not make street food safer—they just make it harder to get."

Fried food limit in school meals

Pies, battered and fried food will be limited in the school food regulations 
School meals in England will have to include at least three fruit and vegetable portions each week – and no more than two portions of fried food.
Ministers have announced regulations for school food in state schools, which will apply from January 2015
The regulations promote drinking water and limit the size of fruit juice portions to quarter pints (150ml).
Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said the rules would “continue to restrict unhealthy foods”.
The school food regulations, designed to promote healthy eating, will be mandatory for local authority schools, new free schools and schools that convert to academies.
Pastry limit 
They will replace regulations introduced in the wake of Jamie Oliver’s campaign to improve the standard of school food.
The Department for Education said the previous rules had done “much to improve school food” but “were complicated and expensive to enforce”.
The revised regulations are intended to allow school cooks more “flexibility”.
The school meal requirements include:
one or more portions of vegetables or salad as an accompaniment every day 
at least three different fruits, and three different vegetables each week
an emphasis on wholegrain foods in place of refined carbohydrates
an emphasis on making water the drink of choice
limiting fruit juice portions to quarter pints (150ml)
restricting the amount of added sugars or honey in other drinks to 5%
no more than two portions a week of food that has been deep-fried, batter-coated or breadcrumb-coated
no more than two portions of food that include pastry each week
“We know that children are continuing to eat too much saturated fat, sugar and salt,” said Susan Jebb, professor of diet and population health at Oxford University.
“It is vital that the food children are offered in schools is nutritious and helps them to learn about the basics of a healthy diet.”
Education Secretary Michael Gove said: “We now have a clear and concise set of food standards, which are easier for cooks to follow and less expensive to enforce. Crucially we have achieved this without any compromise on quality or nutrition.”
Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said: “The revised school food standards will allow schools to be more creative in their menus. They are easier for schools to understand and crucially they will continue to restrict unhealthy foods to ensure our children eat well.”
Christine Blower, leader of the National Union of Teachers, said it was a “missed opportunity” that it would not be mandatory for all schools.
The regulations will be voluntary for schools that became academies between 2010 and 2014.
“Parents of children in these schools will rightly be unhappy that the government is failing to deliver the same guarantee of minimum nutritional food standards for all school,” she said.

‘Diseased meat could go undetected’

The FSA says the new rules prevent bacteria being spread
More diseased meat could end up in sausages and pies because of changes to safety checksin slaughterhouses, hygiene inspectors have warned.
Inspectors in abattoirs used to be able to cut open pig carcasses to check for signs of disease.
But under new European regulations, supported by Britain’s Food Standards Agency (FSA), they will have to rely on visual checks alone.
The FSA says the new system avoids the risk of harmful bacteria being spread.
Around eight million pigs a year are slaughtered for meat in the UK.
Ron Spellman, a British meat inspector with 30 years’ experience, says the new regulations, which took effect from 1 June, risk diseased parts of animals going undetected.
Mr Spellman, who is director general of the European Working community for Food inspectors and Consumer protection (EWFC), which represents meat inspectors across the EU, said: “Last year we know that there were at least 37,000 pigs’ heads with abscesses or tuberculosis lesions in lymph nodes in the head. They won’t be cut now.
“There’s no way to see those little abscesses, little tuberculosis lesions without cutting those lymph nodes.”
Meat from pigs’ heads, is recovered by specialised parts of boning plants and goes into pies, sausages and other processed foods.
The new regulations have been drawn up by the European Food Safety Authority, an agency funded by the EU, but they are based on scientific advice from the FSA.
The FSA’s chief operating officer Andrew Rhodes told the BBC it was better to have a hands-off system using visual checks to reduce cross-contamination, because bugs like E. coli and campylobacter are causing scientists more concern.
He said: “The risks to the consumers are increasingly from microbiological and pathogenic hazards and that’s what we must control.
“We cannot simply ignore the risks that are brought by touching, cutting and handling products that are later going to go on to be cooked and eaten, we have to do this properly.”
But the FSA’s support for the new measures puts them at odds with many of their ownfrontline staff, the 1,100 meat inspectors who check safety standards in Britain’s 350 slaughterhouses and in meat-cutting plants which process carcasses.
Some in the slaughtering industry are also opposing the changes.
Some in the meat industry say the rules will lead to a two-tier system
Kevin Burrows, of C and K Meats, owns an abattoir in Suffolk whose main business is pork.
He sees the new hands-off approach as “a backward step” and says his customers in Asian markets still insist on their pork being checked in the old way, which the FSA has agreed to allow him to do.
But he says: “Why should an exported product be under higher scrutiny than a British product? We’ll end up with a two-tier system.”
Shadow food and farming minister Huw Irranca-Davies has called for an urgent meeting with the FSA.
He says he is not convinced by the science he has seen on the matter and is worried the new rules could damage Britain’s exports, which rely on a reputation for high welfare and meat hygiene standards.
Mr Irranca-Davies said: “We want to see absolute categoric assurances that this is not jeopardising consumer protection and we’re not reassured yet because despite the work that the FSA has been doing over a few years now to look at this issue, what they have presented to us is not a compelling cases for a change in the way that this works.”
A Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) spokesman said: “Cutting up pig carcasses as part of meat inspections increases the risk of harmful bacteria spreading on to meat.
“Under the new regulations, pigs will continue to be inspected for lesions by a vet and again after slaughter by a meat inspector.
“We will continue to inspect pigs for export using the methods agreed with the markets we export to.”