Impact of food-poisoning death on wayside eateries
The times are not good for the food vendors in the streets of the
capital city Thiruvananthapuram. Already facing action from authorities,
including the police, as part of attempts to ensure hygiene and to
maintain law and order, the sector is anticipating tougher days as more
operational norms are to be brought into force.
The turmoil created by a recent food-poisoning death has had its impact
not just on big eateries, but also on the little pushcart and makeshift
‘thattukada’ traders as well. They, who stay awake while the rest of the
city sleeps, serving spicy omelettes, piping hot ‘dosas,’ and steaming
tea to late-night office-goers, the techie crowd, and other passers-by,
are now worried over their very existence.
“We do not have any problems in a stricter food safety regime coming.
But yes, before that is brought into force, we would like the
authorities to ensure basic facilities like supply of clean water,
proper drainage garbage disposal facilities, and adequate power supply,”
says Gopakumar, who operates a mini tea-stall adjacent to the compound
wall of the Transport Bhavan in Thiruvananthapuram.
Mr. Gopakumar, who has been in the business for 28 years now, says the
‘field’ is very competitive, and hence ‘99.99 per cent’ of his
colleagues in the sector would be ready to embrace better hygiene
practices to stay afloat.
“I have not faced any losses after the recent developments, since my
clientele is largely the same set of people, including employees from
the Transport Bhavan and surroundings. They know I offer only safe food.
But it has not been the same for everyone,” he says, adding that many
were reluctant to make more investments into what they already had
because there was no guarantee that they would be allowed to continue.
Padmini, who runs a pushcart eatery along with her brother Manikandan
near the Museum, is one among those hit hard by the raids, revelations,
and their impact on public psyche.
“Our revenue on weekdays used to be around Rs.3,000 a day before all
this. That has fallen to less than 1,000 now, and the profits are far
lesser. On top of that, there are officials who tell us repeatedly that
our surroundings are not hygienic. We submitted several complaints to
the Corporation pointing out that there were no public toilets here and
that garbage from the surroundings are washed towards our carts whenever
it rains,” she says. The onus, many of them feel, is not just on them
to make affairs better, but on civic authorities as well.
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