Departmental stores continue to sell
expired products beyond their shelf-life despite raids by the Food
Safety department a few weeks ago. “Shops still sell expired products in
spite of checks,” said C. Rajan, Secretary General, Consumer
Association of India (CAI).
Recently, consumable
goods were seized when CAI, at the behest of the Food Safety and
Standards Authority of India, conducted a consumer awareness programme
for the first time in five districts across Tamil Nadu. A consumer had
complained to a member of CAI, Kalyani Rajaram, about a retail chain in
Royapuram. When Kalyani went to investigate, she made some “shocking”
discoveries.
“This retail chain was found selling
“healthy” biscuit packets and juice concentrate that were manufactured
more than ten years ago at a 50 per cent discount,” said Rajan. A week
later, they were selling spice powder that had expired months ago.
“We
have sent a letter to the owner of the chain demanding an explanation
and they have responded saying they will look into the issue. It’s
outrageous,” Rajan added.
Shoppers elaborated
instances when they had stumbled upon old deodorants, bad dairy products
and powdered chips among other items. While some said that they always
checked the expiry dates, others admitted that they overlooked them.
“I
check the expiry dates of only some products, not all,” said Sruthi, an
analyst with Mckinsey Knowledge Centre. “I hardly check the dates for
edible items because I trust the shop to keep fresh stock.”
“I am always in a hurry so I don’t check the date,” said another shopper at Spencers Daily.
Mohan, an owner of a departmental store admitted that owners could be callous in replacing expired products.
“We
are very careful with edible items but we are not very careful with
cosmetic products. We’ve received complaints from customers about
deodorants leaving white patches on clothes. In such cases, we allow the
customers to exchange the product,” he said.
It is
not only small stores that commit these mistakes. Larger stores have
also been blamed by customers for being irresponsible.
There
were also many shoppers at smaller stores who said that they did not
know how to check expiry dates. This ignorance, said Rajan, was not very
surprising.
“A responsible consumer is not one who
picks up an expired product, puts it back on the shelf and buys another
one. He should complain to the manager and demand that the product be
removed,” Rajan added.
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