‘Consumer welfare a neglected area’
The concept of consumer protection by means of enacting
laws through organisations designed to ensure the rights of consumers as
well as fair trade competition and the free flow of truthful
information in the marketplace is conspicuously missing in Krishna
district. “Consumer protection laws are a form of government regulation
aimed at protecting the rights of consumers. It mainly deals with areas
where safety or public health is an issue, such as food,” former member
of the District Consumer Forum, Vijayawada, P.V.V. Satyanarayana Murthy
said.
Citing example of the new food safety law that
has replaced the Food Adulteration Act, he said earlier the Vijayawada
Municipal Corporation’s food inspectors used to collect over 400 samples
which is not the case now. “An official appointed to coordinate for the
entire Krishna district has apparently failed miserably in his job,” he
said.
Pointing to the mushrooming push carts loaded
with junk food along the main roads, he said the fact that most of these
vendors park their push carts along open drains where the food stuff is
exposed to unhygienic surroundings.“Consumer welfare has always been a
neglected area. The District Supply Officer, who is also the nodal
officer for consumer protection, is evidently disinterested in consumer
protection,” said Mr. Murthy.
Citing a series of
issues where the hapless consumer has been at the receiving end of the
‘official apathy’, he said supply of contaminated water by the
Vijayawada Municipal Corporation (VMC) was a perennial problem. Since it
directly affects public welfare, authorities at the helm of affairs in
the Consumer Forum must do the needful, he said.
The
other ‘menaces’ listed out by him that need immediate attention include
unregistered chit business in every nook and cranny of the city, the
real estate business where many a time, the unsuspecting consumer walks
into the trap laid by the developer or builder, unscrupulous jewellery
merchants who do not issue proper bills and resort to other unfair means
to make profits, hospital managements ‘looting’ people and insurance
firms by producing inflated figures to the insurance companies.
“The
Consumer Protection Council which is supposed to meet twice a year, has
not met for ages,” he said, urging the district Collector, who is the
chairman of the council, to look into the above mentioned issues.
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