Aug 10, 2014

No antibiotics in poultry: IMA

In wake of shocking findings by CSE on antibiotic-fed chicken,Indian Medical Association demanded a ban on the misuse of antibiotics in the poultry sector 


CSE findings led to drop in chicken sales by 50 percent in three days 
The shocking revelation made by the Center for Science and Environment's (CSE) Pollution Monitoring Lab, India, highlighting rampant use of antibiotics in chicken, has plummeted chicken sales in the country. The staple Indian delicacy is no longer attracting people, mainly in the southern districts. 
Kerala-based chicken dealer Mr S K Naseer, who is also the state general secretary of All Kerala Poultry Federation, India, said, "During the past three days, demand for chicken has come down by 50 percent, from 6-8 lakh kg per day to 3-4 lakh kg. " 
Following release of CSE results, that made headlines, the Indian Medical Association (IMA) demanded an immediate ban on antibiotic use in the poultry industry. 
The Central Advisory Committee of the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI), assured that individual states will start surveillance on the issue and would review the regulatory gaps. 
CSE deputy general director, Mr Chandra Bhushan said that this is first step in the right direction that would help in addressing the concern. He added that the regulatory vacuum was the primary reason why the poultry industry is misusing antibiotics. 
Mr Bhushan further said that CSE has started writing to various central and state government functionaries highlighting the concerns and the action that needs to be taken to address this major public health issue.

DINAMALAR NEWS


Food dept. tackling adulteration during Rakhi season

DEHARADUN: The state Food Safety department is tackling adulteration this festive season. Food Security Officers (FSOs) are conducting inspections and collecting samples on a regular basis to keep a tab on the quality of raw material used. 
The department is giving special instructions to owners of major sweet-shops to maintain the quality of food. "We have asked sweet-sellers not to compromise on the quality of products just to meet high demand", said Rajendra Rawat, Head of Food Safety Department. 
According to officials, adulteration in milk and milk products is reported during this period. Dehradun, Haridwar and areas close to the Uttar Pradesh Border are being carefully monitored by the department.
"Most milk products are ferried into the state from neighboring districts in western UP. Chances of adulteration are high in such cases. We have sent special teams to find defaulters and make sure that proper measures are being taken to maintain quality", Rawat said. 
"We have been collecting samples from food-business owners under suspicion. These samples are sent to Rudrapur food lab", said Anoj Thapliyal, FSO Dehradun. 
TOI had earlier reported that Rudrapur Food Lab is the only food and drug testing lab in the state which gets flooded with food samples sent by FSOs of all 13 districts during festive seasons. 
Throughout the day in Dehradun, a team of six will be taking rounds. "We will be carrying out surprise inspections on kitchens of all big and small sweet shops and take samples in case anything suspicious is found", said Thapliyal. These inspections were started on August 1, in anticipation of the festive season.

Lindt has had enough of Indian regulations

Lindt, arguably the fave imported chocolate of Indians, has given up against Indian government regulations. 
Lindt & Sprungli has decided to fold its operations in the country after more than two of its consignments brought into India (in August 2013 and January 2014) were sent back due to a new set of import rules. 
"It's a business decision taken by Lindt. It is not easy to comply with rules so fast," said Jeevan Verma, who was country manager for Lindt India and who has now been reassigned as business head for the Narang Group, which holds distribution rights for Lindt & Sprungli. However, the marketing team, which was directly employed by the Swiss chocolate-makers, has lost its job. 
It all began in August 2013 when three consignments were stopped at the ports in Mumbai after the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) announced new regulations on its website. "We suffered most losses then because August is when we procure the biggest orders considering the festive season," Verma said. Imported packaged foods consignments worth nearly Rs750-Rs1,000 crore were held back, of which one-third was chocolates. 
The new guidelines required the ingredients to appear in descending order of their composition by weight or volume at the time of its manufacture. Lindt adapted to these new regulations, changing the labelling specifically for India, and sent a fresh consignment in January 2014. This too was stopped due to another new ruling which stated that chocolates with vegetable oil or fat would not be allowed. 
A smaller consignment adhering to the 'no vegetable oil or fat' rule was imported, but again it was stopped as now the FSSAI wanted the manufacturers to mention the use of artificial flavours (such as vanilla, strawberry etc) on the label. "These rules were not specified earlier as it was open to interpretation," an official from Lindt stated. 
"We have been importing Lindt for close to six years now and we have never had any issues. The rules were changed overnight and there was no grace period given," Verma said. "For now we have put everything on hold. We have suffered great losses in the past year and we are not sure if new issues might come up." 
With business hit drastically as no products have been brought into the country since last August, Lindt and Sprungli is contemplating seeking legal recourse. "Some of the other brands have managed to get a stay order and have been able to get their products moving. Lindt too is contemplating moving the court," the official stated. 
Anirban Dutta Chowdhury, head of Nuance Group, which manages Duty Free in Bangalore too confirmed that imported chocolates of various brands have been off the shelf. "Lindt is the number one selling chocolate at Bangalore Duty Free. The brand has strong recall value." Imported chocolates will now have to be bought only abroad or in Duty Free outside the country. "However, the grey market is thriving on this latest restriction. But quality is compromised."

உணவு பொருட்கள் தயாரிப்பு: உரிமம் பெற கால அவகாசம் நீட்டிப்பு

பெங்களூரு : உணவு தயாரிப்பு பதிவு அல்லது லைசன்ஸ் பெற, கால அவகாசத்தை மத்திய அரசு நீட்டித்துள்ளது. இதற்கு முன், பிறப்பிக்கப்பட்டிருந்த உத்தரவுபடி, உணவு தயாரித்து சப்ளை செய்பவர்கள், விற்பனை செய்பவர்கள் பதிவு செய்து கொள்ளவும், லைசன்ஸ் பெறவும், ஆக., 4ம் தேதி கடைசி நாளாக இருந்தது. இந்த கெடுவை நீட்டித்துள்ள மத்திய அரசு, 2015, பிப்., 4ம் தேதி வரை, கால அவகாசம் வழங்கியுள்ளது. 
இந்த கால அவகாசத்துக்குள், எந்த விதமான உணவு தயாரிப்பு, விற்பனையில் ஈடுபடுபவர்கள், தங்களின் வருவாய்க்கு தகுந்தது போன்று, பதிவு அல்லது லைசன்ஸ் பெற வேண்டும். கர்நாடகாவில், இதுபோன்ற உணவு விற்பனை தொழிலில் ஈடுபடும் வியாபாரிகள், 6 லட்சம் பேர் உள்ளதாக மதிப்பிடப்பட்டுள்ளது. அவர்களில், ஜூன் 30ம் தேதி வரை, 32 ஆயிரத்து 980 பேர் லைசன்ஸ் பெற்றுள்ளனர். ?.?? லட்சம் பேர், பதிவு சான்றிதழ் பெற்றுள்ளனர். 
உணவு விற்பவர்கள் கலப்படமாக, அசுத்தமான, கெட்டுப்போன, காலாவதியான உணவு பொருட்களை விற்பனை செய்வது தெரிய வந்ததால், சகாயவாணி 0802346 5403 அல்லது டோல் பிரி எண் 180042 513825 என்ற எண்களில் தெரிவிக்கலாம் என, தெரிவிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

Seminar on consumer awareness

Shrimathi Devkunvar Nanalal Bhatt Vaishnav (SDNBV) College for Women conducts ‘Vaishnav Consumer Club (VCC) seminar on ‘Making Students Informed Consumers’ on August 11 on its premises (mini auditorium). The objective of the seminar is to create awareness among student Consumers.
A.M. Swaminathan IAS (retd.) would deliver the inaugural address. A session on the modalities and benefits of ‘Life & Health Insurance’ would be handled by G. Krishnamoorthy, former chairman, LIC of India. R.S. Alagiri Swami (retd.) AGM, State Bank of India, would handle a session on ‘Consumer-related problems in banking sectors.’ G. Santhanarajan, director, Concert Training Academy, would handle a session on ‘Modern Day Issue in Food Safety.’

Why we don’t need genetically-modified crops in India

Aug 10, 2014 - Dr G. Sivaraman
Genetically Modified (GM) plants have created rigorous debates not only in India, but worldwide. GM Crops are a new living organism and the universe has not been acquainted with this for millions of years. The potential adverse and unintended effects of GM plants to the agro system and the safety of foods are the main causes of concern. The global icons in the field of genetic engineering like Prof Michel Antoniou, Prof Seralini and Prof Pushpa Bhargava clearly expressed that; we cannot determine the expected outcome of the conjugation of different genes. There is a substantial possibility of unintended effects which could be harmful to,
1) The organism that the researcher intends to modify;
2) The health of animals or humans who may use the organism;
3) The environment; and
4) Biodiversity. GM is a living technology and has the ability to be irreversible and uncontrollable, unlike the hybrid and chemical interventions in agriculture.
At the outset, any research or new interventions should satisfy the real necessity while the lacuna should be established. As far as GMOs are concerned, there is no actual need for this in our country. Here in India, the problem lies with the distribution of food and not with its production. The reasons positioned by pro- GMO technocrats such as higher yield in harvest, pest & herb resistance have never been satisfactorily proved by the scientific community around the world.
The bio safety of the new organism also has not been dispassionately established. The biosafety document of the BT Brinjal, submitted to MoEF, four years ago cleverly concealed the ambiguity of its inference in every part. Nearly 30% difference in the alkoloidal content between wild and BT Brinjal, was obscured with tag line …“substantially equal”.
Later the standing Parliamentary committee and technical expert committee examined the entire research documents and finally rejected them.Even WHO warrants every nation to do systematic examination while allowing GMOs in their food chain with respect to allregenicity, gene transfer and cross contamination. Apart from that, the current challenge for India’s health scenario is the management of non-communicable diseases such as diabetes, hypertension ischemic heart diseases and carcinoma.
The introductions of GMOs in the food crops have a strong chance to spoil the synergy of plant molecules, and secondary metabolites and thereby certainly spoil the functionalities of the staple food. There is no fool proof data available that GMOs can be kept intact of these synergy, while a new gene has been engineered.
Another aching news is that a few GM manipulations have been started in Indian traditional herbs like aswagantha( withania somnifera), bramhi (baccopa moneerri) and nilavembu (andrographis paniculata). To improve the quantity of particular fractional extracts of the medicinal plants, researchers are trying this Frankenstein technology.
Without knowing traditional Ayush therepeutics and pharmacokinetics, (which is purely based on taste of the herb structured with synergy of secondary metabolites) the contemporaries’ intervention spoils the traditional traits and the IPR of our plants will be questionable. For an ayush physician, medicinal plants are not mere therapeutic chemical yielding factories
The answer to minister Javedkar’s question on why people want to stop scientific studies is very simple: Field trials involve a deliberate open air release of GMOs, which are untested and are merely new organisms in Nature. This poses high risks due to the inherent nature of the technology. There are numerous examples of contamination resulting from field trials.
The whole world is moving towards an eco-friendly lifestyle in many areas. India is one among the few countries having large biodiversity zones with a huge potential to ‘Go Organic’.
In 2002, BT Cotton was officially introduced to India. At that time the cost of cotton seeds was Rs 20-40/ kg. But now the cost of 450gms of cotton seeds is Rs 1,800. If the same hike continues to happen among GM foods what will be the state of grassroot level poor Indian? Another thought for this independence Day is that we will be hoisting the tri-coloured national flag made of genetically modified BT Cotton owned by a big American corporates and not with Gandhiji’s swedeshi.
(The writer is with Poovulagin nanbargal and can be contacted atherbsiddha@gmail.com)