Mar 8, 2016

Suspect detergent in milk? DRDO's test kit will tell you in minutes

More than two thirds of the milk in India does not meet the food safety standards.

India is today the world’s largest producer of milk thanks to the white revolution. Yet more than two thirds of the milk in India does not meet the food safety standards. Adulteration of milk is rampant, a startling six per cent of the samples tested in 2015 by the Ministry of Health had presence of ‘detergents’ in them confirming that ‘synthetic milk’ is a huge problem.
For a lay person trying to differentiate between contaminated and pure milk is a tall order and only specific chemical tests can reveal the truth. Contaminated milk can be a huge health hazard especially when it has been laced with urea, detergents and other toxic chemicals. With the festival of Holi round the corner, it is time to be alert about the dangers of milk contamination.
Now a cheap milk testing kit has been developed by the Defence Food Research Laboratory (DFRL) in Mysuru, which is a part of the gigantic Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO). This kit, which even an untrained person can use at home, helps within minutes detect contamination of six common adulterants in milk.
Recently as part of another initiative, Union Minister for Science & Technology and Earth Sciences Harsh Vardhan unveiled another dedicated system for the detection of adulteration and analysis of milk, developed by Central Electronics Engineering Research Institute (CSIR-CEERI), Pilani.
According to Vardhan, “The gravity of the situation had been such that the National Institute for Transforming India (NITI Aayog) identified the problem of detecting adulteration in the milk within three minutes at Rs 4 or less, as one of the grand challenge areas being considered under the ‘Atal Innovation Mission’.
In this backdrop, Vardhan appreciated the initiative of CSIR for developing and deploying this technology solution, ‘Ksheer-Scanner’, which instantaneously detects the above- identified adulterants in milk. It is a low-cost portable system with user-friendly features. It enables detection of contaminants in just 40-45 seconds at the per sample cost of less than 50 paise.
Earlier, Union Agriculture and Farmers Welfare Minister Radha Mohan Singh while speaking at National Dairy Research Institute, Karnal, Haryana said, “India stands first on global milk product scenario. Milk production has been increased from 137.68 million tonne in 2013-14 to 146.31 million tonne in 2014-15. For the first time there is a record enhancement of milk production as 6.3 per cent whereas on international scenario there is only an increment of 2.2 percent enhancement of milk production.”

This is a spectacular achievement for the country which in 1950 was producing a mere 17 million tonnes of milk. An almost nine-fold increase in milk production in a little over 60 years.
However, what is most embarrassing for the country is a 2015 admission by Union Minister for Health & Family Welfare J P Nadda that “the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) had conducted a nationwide survey on milk adulteration in 2011. A total of 1791 samples were drawn from 33 states and were tested in the government laboratories. 68.4 per cent of the samples were found to be non-conforming to the prescribed standards. Out of these, in 46.8 per cent samples, milk found to be sub-standard in respect of fat and solid not fat (SNF) contents. Another 44.69 per cent of the samples (548) in respect of skim milk powder were found to be non-conforming to the prescribed standards where presence of glucose was detected in 477 samples. A total of 103 samples (5.75 per cent) were found to be adulterated with detergents.”
“Milk adulteration is particularly high during the festival season, when the demand peaks but production cannot be increased,” explains M C Pandey, a scientist at the DFRL who has helped develop the milk testing kit.
The kit developed by the defence institute uses just a few chemicals and strips of paper dipped in a different chemical. A change in colour of the milk or a change in colour of the paper indicates the presence of a contaminant. When detergents are present in the milk the colour of test turns to green, yellow or blue and Pandey says the test can detect as low a value as 0.5 per cent of the contaminant.
Especially in north India, a lot of milk during the festival season is made using detergents and urea. Called ‘synthetic milk’, it resembles milk but can be very harmful.
Every day washing powder and refined oil are mixed and then diluted to make it look and have the consistency of real milk.
Scientists at this nondescript lab in Mysuru developed the kit at a mere cost of Rs 9 lakh and the box containing 320 strips for testing 8 different contaminants with the cost of each test strip coming to just about Rs 2.

Pandey says all the other milk-testing kits require sophisticated laboratory settings but this simple strip based test helps Indian soldiers test supplies of fresh milk even at remote locations.
Occasionally to make milk look fresh, some ‘neutralisers’ are added using the strip test the contaminated milk becomes pink in colour. If the milk contains urea the test becomes yellow.
The technology for the milk testing kit has been transferred to a private company Pearl Corporation says Pandey who says the DRDO sold the technology at a royalty of Rs 1.25 crore annually, this according to him marks the success of this technology.
Pandey explains this kit should be very helpful to plug ingress of contaminated milk at source. He suggests if such tests become common then milk when it is collected by suppliers at the level of the households could be tested and if found contaminated it should be rejected right at the doorstep of a small dairy supplier.
Rather than a large consignment of milk being rejected for contamination at the level of a milk plant, where hundreds of tons of milk gets collected for further processing.
Singh says, “Dairy plays an important role in agriculture domain of the country with the 3.9 per cent contribution to the national gross product. It is not only a substantial source of livelihood but also most credible basis to ensure the national food requirement. It is the repercussion of the growth in dairying that the growth rate of agricultural sector has been 4 per cent unabatedly.
“Today we have been able to provide on an average 302 gm per person per day milk in the country which is more than the minimum required recommended by the WHO.”
So even as India feels proud of being the number one producer of milk in the world having outpaced US, China and Brazil, the large-scale contamination of milk remains a big blemish for the White Revolution.
Towards that Nadda says “the menace of food adulteration and particularly milk adulteration needs to be eliminated.”

Cops cannot take action on gutkha traders, rules HC

Only food inspectors have the right to take action against illegal retailers
A Bombay High Court (HC) order has effectively declared any police action against people possessing and storing gutkha as illegal, stating that only food safety inspectors have this right. Over the last three years, traders in Pune had come under the police scanner and cops, acting on tip-offs, have conducted raids and booked offenders under relevant sections of the Indian Penal Code.
Many traders had objected to this suo-motu action by police, with 45 cases filed against traders since 2013, when the state banned sale, manufacture and storage of gutkha.
The raids, however, showed that the ban remains mainly on paper and Pune continued to receive a huge stock via the Goa-Karnataka route.
The HC held that police action under various sections of the IPC, applied on people possessing and storing gutkha was illegal, and under the Food Safety and Standards Act 2006, only the food safety inspector had the powers to take action.
A division bench of justices AV Nirgude and Indira K Jain, while quashing criminal complaints against 21 people from Pune and other parts of the state, issued this order.
The court also objected to Section 328 of the IPC being applied in such cases, which states that retailing gutkha would amount to administering poison and is a non-bailable offence.
Advocate Rajesh Kavediya, who represented traders in the HC and sessions court, said, "The city police misused the law and arrested many traders, some of them faced police and judicial custody for several months. The sections applied by the police were stringent due to which judges did not risk granting immediate bail. With this HC order, misuse of power by the police will stop, else they are liable to face contempt."
Advocate Sujit Mundada said, "Over 45 cases were registered by the police and crime branch in the past couple of years. Police need to pay an attention towards the issue of law and order and trade of narcotic substance, but by conducting raids on small traders, which is not their job police only harass the community," said Mundada.
Talking to Mirror, joint commissioner (food) of FDA's Pune division, Shashikant Kekre, said, "We heard about the order and will conduct raids on illegal trade of gutkha. If required, we will take help from the police."
An officer attached to the crime branch, requesting anonymity, said, "It is true that police were taking arbitrary action against gutkha traders, but we will rectify this. Instead, we shall pass on information to the FDA officers to take appropriate action according to provisions in the law."

Mar 7, 2016

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DINAMALAR NEWS


Illegal plants boost water business in Telangana

6,000 illegal water plants function from GHMC limits.
Water cans must be made of polyethylene, polyvinyl chloride or polypropylene which costs Rs 280 to Rs 400 apiece.
Hyderabad: The rising demand for purified water has led to the mushrooming of nearly 6,000 unauthorised manufacturing plants. These plants do business worth Rs 100 crore every month. According to records with the Bureau of Indian Standards, only 106 purified water plants across the state have licences, 47 in the city.
With many colonies suffering from poor supply, and middle-class families preferring to purchase purified water instead of the drinking water supplied by the Water Board, demand for bottled water is high. The board supplies water to nearly 1,500 colonies located on the city’s outskirts in three or four days, forcing residents to purchase the 20-litre cans paying Rs 20 to Rs 35 apiece.
As per an official estimate, nearly 30 lakh bubble cans are sold every month in the city, of which only five lakh are supplied by branded companies and another five lakh by water purification plants that meet ISI standards. The remaining cans are produced by illegal manufacturers. It is estimated that another 50 lakh 20-litre water cans are sold at bus stands, railway stations, canteens and hotels under GHMC limits. Only about half the water bottles that are sold in the city are from branded companies.
Sections 79 and 80 of the Food Safety and Standards Regulations, 2006 state that all plants purifying water should be licensed by the BIS. It takes Rs 25 lakh to set up a water purification plant as per norms, including obtaining licence from the BIS, sophisticated equipment, microbiological lab to test samples and recruiting a chemist. It takes only about Rs 3 lakh to set up an unauthorised plant. BIS director M.V.S.D. Prasada Rao said the bureau had the authority to conduct raids and checks at the plants which have obtained licence to ensure that standards are maintained.
“As per the law and regulations, officials responsible for food safety, GHMC and revenue department officers and the Indian Institute of Preventive Medicine have to crack the whip on illegal water plants. If we identify illegal plants during our raids, we pass on the information to departments,” he said.

Not yet 'made', murabba finds way to shop shelves

1kg pack of Aawla Murabba, manufactured by Patanjali Ayurveda.
LUCKNOW: Officials of the Food Safety and Drug Administration department tumbled upon two 1-kg packs of Aawla Murabba (manufactured by Patanjali Ayurveda), which mentioned the date of manufacturing of the Murabba as October 20, 2016, while its expiry date has been mentioned as October 19, 2017. Interestingly, this sample of Murabba was available for sale in the market. 
The sample was taken from a retail shop located in Kalyanpur Ring Road.

கலப்பட பொருட்கள் விற்றால் நடவடிக்கை உணவு பாதுகாப்பு அலுவலர் எச்சரிக்கை

தஞ்சை, மார்ச் 7:
கலப் பட பொருட் கள் விற் பனை செய் வோர் மீது கடும் நட வ டிக்கை எடுக் கப் ப டும் என்று தஞ்சை மாவட்ட உணவு பாது காப்பு நிய மன அலு வ லர் ரமேஷ் பாபு கூறி னார்.
தஞ்சை மாவட்ட உணவு பாது காப்பு மற் றும் மருந்து நிர் வாக துறை ( உணவு பிரிவு) மாவட்ட நிய மன அலு வ ல ராக பணி யாற் றிய தட் சி ணா மூர்த்தி நாகை மாவட் டத் திற்கு இடம் மாற் றம் செய் யப் பட் டார். இதைத் தொடர்ந்து திரு வா ரூர் மாவட்ட நிய மன அலு வ ல ராக பணி யாற் றிய ரமேஷ் பாபு தஞ்சை மாவட்ட உணவு பாது காப்பு நிய மன அலு வ ல ராக நேற்று பொறுப் பேற் றர்.
இவர் தஞ்சை மாவட் டத் தில் கலப் பட பொருட் கள் விற் பனை செய் வோர் மற் றும் சுகா தா ரம் இல் லாத பொருட் கள், கலா வ தி யான பொருட் கள் ஆகி ய வற்றை விற் பனை செய் வோர் மீது கடும் நட வ டிக்கை எடுக் கப் ப டும் என்று கூறி னார்.

Cops cannot prosecute people possessing gutkha: Bombay HC

Manufacture, sale and storage of Gutkha is banned in Maharashtra.
The Bombay High Court on Friday held that police action under various sections of the Indian Penal Code, applied on people possessing and storing Gutkha was illegal, and under the Food Safety and Standards Act (FSSA) only the food safety inspector had the powers to take action.
Sale/manufacture and storage of Gutkha has been banned in Maharashtra since 2013. A division bench of justice AV Nirgude and justice Indira K Jain, while quashing the criminal complaint against 21 people, said: "The food safety officers were not prohibited from proceedings against the applicants/petitioners under provisions of chapter X of the Food and Safety Standard (FSS) Act, 2006."
Appearing for one of the petitioners, advocate Rahul Totala said: "The court has quashed police action under sections 372, 373, 188 and 328 of the Indian Penal Code, but not prohibited the Food Safety Inspectors from taking appropriate action."
The accused had argued that as per the FSS Act, the authority can initiate police action. The court said: "By no stretch of imagination, manufacturing and possessing gutkha and pan masala would amount to administering poison."
The court, while passing the order, also took into consideration that the authority had not carried out any analysis on the seized products. The bench said: "Therefore, it cannot be said that gutkha and pan masala are stupefying, intoxicating or unwholesome drug. Besides, offering these items of food would not amount to intention to cause hurt."

Mar 6, 2016

Health department fails to meet food safety targets

Health department officials continue to adopt a casual approach towards the monthly targets set by the food safety branch as all districts have completely failed to achieve targets.
Out of the state-wide target for collection of 1,740 samples set by the health department in January, only 816 samples were collected by authorities in the districts. Of these 46% collected samples, 25% tested ‘fail’ and were declared unfit for consumption.
Districts blatantly failing to achieve targets in January include Jalandhar, Bathinda, Ludhiana, Gurdaspur, Hoshiarpur, Pathankot, Patiala, Moga, Mansa and Muktsar.
Jalandhar health department was given a target of 150 food samples, but it collected only 75 samples, out of which 12 were found unfit. Ludhiana health department had a target of 250 food samples, but it collected only 87, out of which 40 failed to pass the food safety test. Similarly, 41 samples were collected by Bathinda health department out of a target of 100.
It is not the first time that of ficials are showing apathy towards food safety as in the period from January 1 to December 31, 2015, out of 15,560 target samples, Jalandhar had collected 9,936, out of which 28% samples tested failed.
Moreover, the Food Safety and Standards Act has the provision of compulsory registration for all food businesses to ensure the availability of safe and wholesome food for human consumption, but districts have been lagging behind in ensuring complete registration.
On March 6, 2014, online registration of food businesses was begun. Jalandhar food safety administration issued 434 licences and did 2,124 registrations of food businesses till February 26 this year. Businesses with a turnover of more than Rs 12 lakh are issued licenses.
Sources in the health department said only milk, milk products, bakery products, sweets and other such samples were being collected as per guidelines issued by higher officials.
They further said even though senior officials had fixed a minimum target to be completed every month, apathetic officials failed to meet the targets.
They added that most drives were undertaken on the heels of Diwali only when the sale of sweets shot up and manufacturers prepared items in bulk with complete disregard of hygiene and food safety.
A health department official said the sampling drive against adulterated food products was being hampered due to interference of political leaders. He added that huge workload and shortage of staff were other reasons behind the failure in achieving targets.

Cop actions on gutkha illegal: High Court

Aurangabad: The Aurangabad bench of the Bombay high court has said raids and actions taken by the police against people possessing and storing gutkha were illegal.
Quashing the police action against some applicants and petitioners for possessing and storing gutkha after carrying raids under various sections of the IPC, the court on Friday observed, "The food safety officers were not prohibited from proceedings against the applicants/petitioners under provisions of chapter X of the Food and Safety Standard (FSS) Act, 2006."
It said, "Since all these criminal applications and criminal writ petitions are taken up for final hearing by consent of all the parties and as the point raised in all these cases is more or less similarly placed, they are disposed of by this common judgment. For the purpose of disposal of the cases, we the bench utilised facts of Writ Petition No. 1027 of 2015 as representative."
The petitioners had approached the high court through lawyers including R R Mantri, Rameshwar Totla and Rahul Totla, while the government was represented by additional public prosecutor Archana Gondhalekar.
As many as 13 criminal writ petitions and applications were filed in the Aurangabad bench of the HC, challenging the police actions such as conducting raids and seizing of gutkha and pan masala in different parts of the state.
The food security officials had subsequently initiated registration of offences against the petitioners under sections 372, 373, 188 and 328 of the IPC.
While passing the order, the bench of Justice A V Nirgude and Justice Indira K Jain said the police action in these cases were illegal. The bench observed, "By no stretch of imagination, manufacturing and possessing gutkha and pan masala would amount to administering poison."
It added, "The commissioner (FDA) opined that its sale is not in public interest. This opinion is based on various reports, but not the report of the food analyst appointed under the provisions of the FSS Act. Therefore, it cannot be said that gutkha and pan masala are stupefying, intoxicating or unwholesome drug. Besides, offering these items of food would not amount to intention to cause hurt. The provisions of Section 328 of the Indian Penal Code to the present cases is therefore impermissible."
The bench noted the contention of the petitions that "on May 14, 2015, the petitioner was found transporting large quantities of pouches of tobacco, which is called 'gutkha' in common parlance, pouches of pan-masala in a truck. The truck was stopped by the food security officer, Osmanabad. The officer not only seized the goods but even lodged a police complaint, alleging that the petitioner had violated the government notification (dated May 15, 2014), prohibiting certain acts pertaining to gutkha/pan masala and thereby committed offence punishable under sections 26 and 30 of the Food and Safety Standards Act, 2006."

Five years after Fukushima nuclear disaster, India puts Japanese food imports off radioactive scanner

While India has decided to stop scanning Japanese food imports after five years of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in 2011, US, Germany, Turkey, Russia and Australia still scans all products coming in from Japan.
Food products from Japan that run the risk of being contaminated by radioactive substance will now get an easy access into India as the Centre has decided to discontinue the scanning of these items. Even after five years of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in 2011, reports indicate that food products from Japan carry the risk of radioactive contamination that can lead to various forms of cancer. Several other countries are still following a strict mechanism to keep a check on Japanese food imports, but the Indian government feels otherwise.
The imports' division of the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) under the Union Health Ministry has recently issued an order saying, "The advisory dated 15.03.2011 issued regarding monitoring of food articles imported from Japan for radioactive contamination, issued earlier as a temporary measure in 2011, is hereby withdrawn." The order has been conveyed to the customs department and the food safety commissioners of all states.
The abrupt end to the practice has, however, alarmed experts. "The Indian government should not have stopped the screening because the kind of nuclear disaster that happened in Japan can still have its effects. Five years is not enough time to decide that food products from Japan are free from radiation and will be safe in the future," said a senior radiation oncologist based in a government hospital in Delhi.
Items like sea food, vegetable seeds, confectionery, fruits and vegetables are imported to India from Japan.
Pawan Kumar Agarwal, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), FSSAI, told Mail Today that the screening of food items was unnecessarily delaying the process of imports from Japan. "All the food products from Japan were under strict surveillance for the past five years for any radioactive contamination. However, no food product was found to be contaminated with any radioactive substance. So, we decided to stop the monitoring because it is not required anymore," Agarwal said.
The move by the Indian government can be seen as an attempt to bolster the already strong business and cultural ties with Japan. Prime Minister Narendra Modi had visited Japan in 2014 and his Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe returned the favour with a Delhi visit in 2015 - putting in place a new chapter of Indo-Japan ties.
The withdrawal of scanning of food items from Japan comes even as the United States Food and Drug Administration continues to monitor Japanese food imports for any likely radioactive presence. Along similar lines, countries like Germany, Turkey and Russia also scan all imports from Japan. There are also checks on vessels and containers from Japan for any radioactive contamination by the US, the Netherlands and the EU. Australia, which imports automobiles from Japan, also keeps a strict check on radiation. In March 2015, radiation was found in sample of green tea imported from Japan to the US. A study by Stanford University and Stony Brook University on radioactive levels in the Pacific Ocean found high levels of radioactive contamination in Bluefin tuna caught off the shores of California.
Recently, a study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the US stated that freshwater fish and ocean bottom dwellers around Fukushima are at a higher risk of radioactive contamination compared to most other types of ocean fish in the same area.
In 2011 a massive earthquake in Japan lead to radioactive leaks from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plants. Radioactive isotopes were released from the reactor containment vessels and discharged into the sea. Trace quantities of radioactive particles from the incident, including iodine-131 and caesium-134/137, have since been detected around the world.
Caesium-137 has a half-life of about 30.17 years and if enters human body it can cause cellular damage and potentially lead to cancer. "Half life of Caesium-137 is around 30 years which means it takes 30 years for the radioactivity of the Caesium-137 isotope to fall to half its original value," says a Delhi-based senior radiation specialist.

Fortification of Milk to Combat Malnutrition

The milk, which you buy off the shelves, is going to be fortified with Vitamin A and D to address the deficiencies among the Indian masses. Milk cooperatives across the country have agreed to the proposal and the standards will soon be notified by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI). The move, which the government says will help combat malnutrition, is part of the plan to fortify major food substances like wheat, rice, edible oil and other food products. The decision was taken at a high-level meeting of an inter-ministerial group comprising the ministries of Health, Women and Child Development, Food and Civil Supplies, and Human Resource Development. “The milk cooperatives were given a presentation by the National Institute of Nutrition (NIN), Hyderabad, and now the food ministry is preparing the detailed guidelines,” sources said. The FSSAI will now notify the standards. The proposal was made by a group of secretaries, working on health and education, before the Prime Minister’s Office in the beginning of January. Wheat is to be fortified with iron, rice with iron and vitamin D, milk and edible oils with vitamin A.
The recommendation also talks about double fortification of salt with iodine, as it was felt that the present standards were not enough. 

How safe is your milk to drink? Experts caution against contamination



A cheap milk testing kit has been developed by the Defence Food Research Laboratory (DFRL) in Mysuru. Express files A cheap milk testing kit has been developed by the Defence Food Research Laboratory (DFRL) in Mysuru. Express files
India is today the world’s largest producer of milk thanks to the white revolution. Yet more than two thirds of the milk in India does not meet the food safety standards. Adulteration of milk is rampant, a startling six per cent of the samples tested in 2015 by the Ministry of Health had presence of ‘detergents’ in them confirming that ‘synthetic milk’ is a huge problem.
For a lay person trying to differentiate between contaminated and pure milk is a tall order and only specific chemical tests can reveal the truth. Contaminated milk can be a huge health hazard especially when it has been laced with urea, detergents and other toxic chemicals. With the festival of Holi round the corner, it is time to be alert about the dangers of milk contamination.
Now a cheap milk testing kit has been developed by the Defence Food Research Laboratory (DFRL) in Mysuru, which is a part of the gigantic Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO). This kit, which even an untrained person can use at home, helps within minutes detect contamination of six common adulterants in milk.
Recently as part of another initiative, Union Minister for Science & Technology and Earth Sciences Harsh Vardhan unveiled another dedicated system for the detection of adulteration and analysis of milk, developed by Central Electronics Engineering Research Institute (CSIR-CEERI), Pilani.
According to Vardhan, “The gravity of the situation had been such that the National Institute for Transforming India (NITI Aayog) identified the problem of detecting adulteration in the milk within three minutes at Rs 4 or less, as one of the grand challenge areas being considered under the ‘Atal Innovation Mission’.
In this backdrop, the Vardhan appreciated the initiative of CSIR for developing and deploying this technology solution, ‘Ksheer-Scanner’, which instantaneously detects the above- identified adulterants in milk. It is a low-cost portable system with user-friendly features. It enables detection of contaminants in just 40-45 seconds at the per sample cost of less than 50 paise.
Earlier, Union Agriculture and Farmers Welfare Minister Radha Mohan Singh while speaking at National Dairy Research Institute, Karnal, Haryana said, “India stands first on global milk product scenario. Milk production has been increased from 137.68 million tonne in 2013-14 to 146.31 million tonne in 2014-15. For the first time there is a record enhancement of milk production as 6.3 per cent whereas on international scenario there is only an increment of 2.2 percent enhancement of milk production."

Is your milk safe to drink? Containing contamination in milk

Now a cheap milk testing kit has been developed by the Defence Food Research Laboratory (DFRL) in Mysuru, which is a part of the gigantic DRDO
NEW DELHI: India is today the world's largest producer of milk thanks to the white revolution. Yet more than two thirds of the milk in India does not meet the food safety standards. Adulteration of milk is rampant, a startling six per cent of the samples tested in 2015 by the Ministry of Health had presence of 'detergents' in them confirming that 'synthetic milk' is a huge problem. 
For a lay person trying to differentiate between contaminated and pure milk is a tall order and only specific chemical tests can reveal the truth. Contaminated milk can be a huge health hazard especially when it has been laced with urea, detergents and other toxic chemicals. With the festival of Holi round the corner, it is time to be alert about the dangers of milk contamination. 
Now a cheap milk testing kit has been developed by the Defence Food Research Laboratory (DFRL) in Mysuru, which is a part of the gigantic Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO). This kit, which even an untrained person can use at home, helps within minutes detect contamination of six common adulterants in milk. 
Recently as part of another initiative, Union Minister for Science & Technology and Earth Sciences Harsh Vardhan unveiled another dedicated system for the detection of adulteration and analysis of milk, developed by Central Electronics Engineering Research Institute (CSIR-CEERI), Pilani. 
According to Vardhan, "The gravity of the situation had been such that the National Institute for Transforming India ( NITI Aayog) identified the problem of detecting adulteration in the milk within three minutes at Rs 4 or less, as one of the grand challenge areas being considered under the 'Atal Innovation Mission'. 
In this backdrop, Vardhan appreciated the initiative of CSIR for developing and deploying this technology solution, 'Ksheer-Scanner', which instantaneously detects the above - identified adulterants in milk. It is a low-cost portable system with user-friendly features. It enables detection of contaminants in just 40-45 seconds at the per sample cost of less than 50 paise. 
Earlier, Union Agriculture and Farmers Welfare Minister Radha Mohan Singh while speaking at National Dairy Research Institute, Karnal, Haryana said, "India stands first on global milk product scenario. Milk production has been increased from 137.68 million tonne in 2013-14 to 146.31 million tonne in 2014-15. For the first time there is a record enhancement of milk production as 6.3 per cent whereas on international scenario there is only an increment of 2.2 percent enhancement of milk production." 
This is a spectacular achievement for the country which in 1950 was producing a mere 17 million tonnes of milk. An almost nine-fold increase in milk production in a little over 60 years. 
However, what is most embarrassing for the country is a 2015 admission by Union Minister for Health & Family Welfare J P Nadda that "the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) had conducted a nationwide survey on milk adulteration in 2011. A total of 1791 samples were drawn from 33 states and were tested in the government laboratories. 68.4 per cent of the samples were found to be non-conforming to the prescribed standards. Out of these, in 46.8 per cent samples, milk found to be sub-standard in respect of fat and solid not fat (SNF) contents. Another 44.69 per cent of the samples (548) in respect of skim milk powder were found to be non-conforming to the prescribed standards where presence of glucose was detected in 477 samples. A total of 103 samples (5.75 per cent) were found to be adulterated with detergents." 
"Milk adulteration is particularly high during the festival season, when the demand peaks but production cannot be increased," explains M C Pandey, a scientist at the DFRL who has helped develop the milk testing kit. 
The kit developed by the defence institute uses just a few chemicals and strips of paper dipped in a different chemical. A change in colour of the milk or a change in colour of the paper indicates the presence of a contaminant. When detergents are present in the milk the colour of test turns to green, yellow or blue and Pandey says the test can detect as low a value as 0.5 per cent of the contaminant. 
Especially in north India, a lot of milk during the festival season is made using detergents and urea. Called 'synthetic milk', it resembles milk but can be very harmful. Every day washing powder and refined oil are mixed and then diluted to make it look and have the consistency of real milk. 
Scientists at this nondescript lab in Mysuru developed the kit at a mere cost of Rs 9 lakh and the box containing 320 strips for testing 8 different contaminants with the cost of each test strip coming to just about Rs 2. 
Pandey says all the other milk-testing kits require sophisticated laboratory settings but this simple strip based test helps Indian soldiers test supplies of fresh milk even at remote locations.
Occasionally to make milk look fresh, some 'neutralisers' are added. Using the strip test the contaminated milk becomes pink in colour. If the milk contains urea the test becomes yellow. 
The technology for the milk testing kit has been transferred to a private company Pearl Corporation says Pandey who says the DRDOsold the technology at a royalty of Rs 1.25 crore annually, this according to him marks the success of this technology. 
Pandey explains this kit should be very helpful to plug ingress of contaminated milk at source. He suggests if such tests become common then milk when it is collected by suppliers at the level of the households could be tested and if found contaminated it should be rejected right at the doorstep of a small dairy supplier. 
Rather than a large consignment of milk being rejected for contamination at the level of a milk plant, where hundreds of tons of milk gets collected for further processing. 
Singh says, "Dairy play an important role in agriculture domain of the country with the 3.9 per cent contribution to the national gross product. It is not only a substantial source of livelihood but also most credible basis to ensure the national food requirement. It is the repercussion of the growth in dairying that the growth rate of agricultural sector has been 4 per cent unabatedly. 
"Today we have been able to provide on an average 302 gm per person per day milk in the country which is more than the minimum required recommended by the WHO." 
So even as India feels proud of being the number one producer of milk in the world having outpaced US, China and Brazil, the large-scale contamination of milk remains a big blemish for the White Revolution. 
Towards that Nadda says "the menace of food adulteration and particularly milk adulteration needs to be eliminated."

Colourful and Tasty but They can Bite You Back

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: Chilli has a special place in our food habits, saving some our favourite dishes from blandness. But there is an unnoticed and dangerous side. According to a report released by the Kerala Agricultural University, the chilli powder we get in attractive packets contains pesticides that harm our health.
The report discovered that various spices and condiments brands have been selling products with heavy pesticide residues. Pesticide Residue Analytical and Research Laboratory of the university found at least four different types of pesticides in samples taken from branded red chilli powder sold at various super markets in Kottayam, Changanassery, Alappuzha, Malappuram and Kasargod.
It was found that chilli powder, chilli long dry, crushed chilli, Kashmiri chilli powder, cumin seed , cumin powder, sambar powder, tea powder etc contain pesticide residue. The pesticide limits prescribed by Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) for food products is not enough to keep the menace away.
From the list mentioned in the university report, food safety officials can take action only against those selling contaminated cardamom because of the specific Maximum Residual Limit (MRL) prescribed for it in the spice and condiments category.
“There has been a delay in expanding the list. Many products we have analysed did not have a MRL prescribed. detailed study is required on poisonous residues found,” said Thomas Biju Mathew, professor and head, PRRAL. The report indicates widespread use of pesticides, finding its way into the food cycle. However, enforcement agencies find themselves helpless with no expansion of the list in the Safety and Standards Rules since 2011.
“MRL limit is fixed after a lot of process. Until the limit is fixed it would be difficult for food safety officials to take action,” said D Sivakumar, Joint Commissioner of Food Safety.
The report has found pesticide residue levels in fruits, vegetables and processed food products. In the vegetable category curry leaves continue to have high pesticide residue. The report found that fruits and cereals collected from market - organic and farm gates - have less pesticide residues.

CSE hails DoEs advisory on fatty food

Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) has welcomed the move by the Directorate of Education (DoE) about sensitisation on fatty food. 
The Directorate has directed heads of government/ government-aided and recognised unaided schools to sensitize students and parents about the ill-effects of foods high in fat, sugar and salt (HFSS) through morning assembly, teacher interactive periods, parent-teacher meetings and school activities. 
Citing adverse health effects of fats, saturated fats, transfats, sugar and salt, the Directorate, as part of measures that could be taken, has asked school heads to consider banning the sale of HFSS foods from school canteens. 
It has also mentioned health hazards of excess caffeine through carbonated beverages and energy drinks. 
Chandra Bhushan, deputy director general, CSE said, "We welcome Delhi Government's move to ask schools to consider banning junk foods and create awareness about its ill effects." 
"In the absence of mandatory regulations, we hope that schools will act proactively and prohibit junk foods such as carbonated soft drinks, chocolates, chips, etc. in school canteens to promote healthy food habits among school children," he added. 
Besides, CSE has advocated against sale of junk foods, said Bhushan, and produced evidence and research to show the presence of undesirable ingredients in food commonly sold to children and their impact on their health. 
The circular directs school heads to ensure that school canteens sell fresh and healthy foods which are low in fat, sugar and salt. Other suggested measures to create awareness include regular instructions during morning assembly, organizing events like drawing, paintingand spreading the word about healthy fresh food options which are low in fats, salt and sugar. 
Special emphasis is to be put on lower classes, advises the Directorate. Issued in compliance to last year's directions of the High Court of Delhi, the Directorate in addition has asked school heads to read and implement guidelines issued by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) and Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE). 
Bhushan said, "Earlier, in January this year, CBSE, based on the report of a group constituted by the Ministry of Women and Child Development, had issued a circular to all schools affiliated to it, aiming to limit consumption of junk foods among school children. The FSSAI, also in October2015, had issued 'Draft guidelines for making available wholesome, nutritious, safe and hygienic food to school children in India'." 
Commonly available HFSS foods or junk foods include carbonated soft drinks, packaged chips/snacks, chocolates, pizza, burger, instant noodles, etc. 
School children are aggressively targeted through celebrity endorsements; promotional campaigns, etc. by companies of these food products. 
"Globally, banning junk foods in schools and nearby is considered an important measure to limit consumption and exposure to children and decrease childhood obesity and other related non-communicable diseases such as hypertension, diabetes, dental problems, etc," added Bhushan.

Mar 5, 2016

Aparoopa Bakery fined Rs 18 thousand for keeping unsafe food

Agartala, Mar 04, 2016 : Rampant sale of fast food item across Tripura has become a major source of concern for common people as well as authorities supposed to keep a tab on sale of quality products. In a swoop yesterday the central Food Safety and Standard Authority of India (FSSAI) imposed a penalty of Rs 18 thousand on the local 'Aparoopa Bakery' for keeping cakes and fast food items beyond the date of expiry. When the FSSAI authority raided the premises of the 'Aparoopa Bakery' the owners failed to give any proof of the date and timing of manufacture and whether they were still fit for human consumption without inviting health related problems. 
Official sources here said that the department of food and Agartala Municipal Corporation (AMC) authority are tasked to issue and license and monitor the nature and quality of food items sold in shops and stalls across the state. The FSSAI atuhority's raid yesterday and punitive action taken proved that AMC authority and department of food were not alert on the crucial matter.

Khichdi was unfit for consumption: Lab report

Nagpur: The khichdi served as part of midday meal (MDM) at Shantiniketan School (Hingna Road) on February 20 was "not fit for human consumption", according to the food test report prepared by a state govt lab.
Ninety-three students from the school were hospitalized after consuming the khichdi in which a lizard had fallen during its preparation.
Nilesh Waghmare, district in charge of MDM scheme, said, "The lab report says that the khichdi did not conform to food safety standards and was unfit for consumption. However, the report also says that the bacteria which caused food poisoning could not be found."
The Zilla Parishad, which oversees MDM implementation in the district, will now prepare its report based on both the test and statements taken from the staff. Waghmare said, "The report will be ready next week and we will submit our findings to the government. A similar incident happened in Umred and we are awaiting the lab reports of that incident as well."
In the Shantiniketan School case, it appears to be a case of negligence rather than any sinister sabotage, and it is unlikely that the education department will take any strict action. The police investigation will however continue independently.
In the Umred case, it is suspected that the problem was with the red chilli powder used in cooking the MDM.
The state government is working towards a centralized kitchen scheme which will ensure that quality is monitored. This scheme was stalled for a couple of years because certain self help groups, who were engaged in cooking MDM, went to court citing loss of employment. The court ruled in favour of state and the process for starting it is now underway.
Nand Kumar, principal secretary for school education, said, "The process is on and we are looking at tender documents submitted by people three years ago. We have to verify whether or not those companies still exist and what we need to do now. So regardless, the centralized kitchen scheme is very much on and we are working towards that. "

FDA seizes illegal gutkha, kharra and pan masala worth Rs 5 lakh

NAGPUR: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) conducted a one-day drive on Friday from 9 am and seized banned kharra, gutkha and pan masala costing Rs4,98,535. The drive was conducted by food safety officers and inspectors in nine teams with total 23 officials on the job.
Interestingly, the drive was conducted under the guidance of FDA commissioner from Mumbai Harshdeep Kamble, who is in city for some official work. Kharra, gutkha, scented tobacco and pan masala have been banned in Maharashtra since July 20 2015.
The teams conducted simultaneous raids at ST bus stand, Baidyanath Square, Santra Market, Cotton Market, Railway Station, Khamla, Ajni Square, Orange City Hospital premises, Swamlambi Nagar at 65 pan stalls. Twenty-five of these were found to be selling banned products.
Joint FDA Commissioner (Food) Shivaji Desai, Nagpur division led the drive.

UPHRC seeks action on carcinogens in mid-day meal

Meerut: Eight months after TOI reported about the discovery of carcinogens and banned dye in spice and condiments used in the preparation of mid-day meals at a primary school in Khanpur, the Uttar Pradesh Human Rights Commission (UPHRC) has directed the district magistrate (DM) of Meerut to take appropriate action in the matter. The decision has come after a resident of Mumbai brought the matter to the notice of the UPHRC and submitted TOI's report as a part of his complaint.
"Let the copy of the complaint be sent to the DM of Meerut for appropriate action in the matter in accordance with the law," read the order passed by justice UK Dhaon, acting chairperson, UPHRC.
The direction has come after a complaint submitted by G D'Souza, a resident of Mumbai on July 30, 2015. D'Souza had used the TOI story's online copy as evidence while submitting the complaint via an email to the Human Rights Commission wherein he sought for an immediate inquiry into the matter, appropriate compensation to the victims and their families and action against the erring officials.

Nestle: Case of bad rumor management

Nestlé and overturned the government’s ban on Maggi noodles following additional tests from three independent laboratories with lead content well within the permissible limits.'
I had written earlier this week on how Lipton had made an excellent effort at containing rumors of worms in the tea bags in my post Lipton: A Lesson in Rumor Management.
The funny thing about rumors is that there are 2 kinds, as we all know from our personal experiences. When a rumor starts you don't know if it is true or false. Either way it tends to grow virally almost in geometric progression. And all the time the public waits for a confirmation on the truth or falsity of the rumor and anxiously at that.
But in the Nestle Maggi case in India most of the public was left wondering if Nestle was charged unfairly. I quote from the Nestle Global Website.
'In light of growing consumer confusion due to an Indian government laboratory detecting lead levels above permissible limits, Nestle India announced that it would temporarily stop selling Maggi noodles until the situation was resolved. The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) issued an order to recall Magginoodles from the Indian market and banned its sale and production.
Nestle India consequently filed a legal petition with the Bombay High Court, seeking a judicial review of this order. The Court ruled in favor of Nestle and overturned the government's ban on Maggi noodles following additional tests from three independent laboratories with lead content well within the permissible limits.'
So if Nestle was in fact innocent and had been wrongly charged, could they have done something about it?
Rumor Management
Any rumor can grow rapidly taking the shape of the Diffusion Curve proposed by Dr Everett Rogers almost 50 years ago. Once the rumor starts, it moves up very quickly to take the shape of the normal distribution curve.
Original chart by Dr Everett Rogers. Improvisations to include rumors by Prabhakar Mundkur.
The challenge in rumor management is that unless the rumor is quelled effectively at the 'innovators' stage it will start to take an upward turn. This means that instead of seeing how the curve grows, we need to figure out how to kill the curve quickly in its formative stages. The blue dotted lines in the above graph represent the points at which the graph can be prevented from growing for which positive actions need to be taken for its decline. Once it has passed the 'early adopters' stage it would have gained so much momentum that it would become impossible to quell it. In rumor management the emphasis is on how to kill the growth of the curve and bring it back to zero.
Nestle let the rumor grow. The confirmation of MSG in Nestle's Maggi Noodles was in April 2015. The main line media announced it on May 20 a month later. They had a whole month to think about it. They could have recalled the product themselves if they had any doubts of the eventual consequences. Or it is possible they thought the government wouldn't take it too seriously, the media would forget about it and the controversy would die a natural death by just plainly observing silence on the issue.
Nestle handled Communication Badly
Nestle cut off all lines of communication instead of using them. They didn't speak to their consumers. They didn't talk to the journalists who were hounding them for a statement. Instead all the journalists got was a computer generated impersonal statement. On social media their responses were passive. There was no protest. No one got the feeling that they were being wronged. In fact they seemed more than willing to give in to a kind of passive submission.

So Nestle let the rumor keep on growing while Nestle stayed in denial. Their global website for the longest time did not even acknowledge the problem. In the meantime even Maggi lovers who kept pledging their love for the brand got tired.
And then the loyal consumers too gave in to the rumor. The brand suffered, which is a pity. Because it is a great brand that India loves and if only Nestle had managed the rumor it would have been where it always was.
Nestle and Greenpeace
But this is not the first time Nestle has had a run in on problems of this kind. In 2010 Nestle had a run in with Greenpeace.
I reproduce the Green Peace accusation verbatim.
Need a Break? So does the Rainforest
Nestle, maker of Kit Kat, uses palm oil from companies that are trashing Indonesian rainforests, threatening the livelihoods of local people and pushing orang-utans towards extinction.
We all deserve to have a break - but having one shouldn't involve taking a bite out of Indonesia's precious rainforests. We're asking Nestle to give rainforests and orang-utans a break and stop buying palm oil from destroyed forests.

Nestle's response unfortunately was to ask for a withdrawal of the video claiming infringement of copyright, so it was finally taken off YouTube. Greenpeace then moved the video to Vimeo where it again went viral. Finally it ended in an outbreak of criticism on mainstream media around the world. Once again Nestle helped the rumor curve to grow to its fullest before they apologized. By that time the damage was done.
Nestle finally gave in to Greenpeace's attacks. Greenpeace then was forced to make this announcement.
A big 'Thank You!' to the hundreds of thousands of you who supported our two-month Kit Kat campaign by e-mailing Nestle, calling them, or spreading the campaign message via your Facebook, Twitter and other social media profiles. This morning, Nestle finally announced a break for the orang-utan - as well as Indonesian rainforests and peatlands - by committing to stop using products that come from rainforest destruction.
There is one lesson to be learnt in all this. If you are in the wrong it's better to apologize and change track immediately rather than act nonchalant and righteous, because you really need to kill the viral growth of the rumor curve. The more it grows the more it damages your brand. But when someone accuses you of any wrong, even when you are in the right, please defend yourself immediately as in the Nestle India case.
As someone once said an unchallenged lie often becomes the truth.
The article is written by Prabhakar Mundkur, an ad veteran who has spent 35 years in advertising and worked in India, Africa and Asia. He is currently Chief Mentor with Percept H, a JV between Hakuhodo of Japan and Percept Ltd in India.

Maggi ban not in retaliation to EU's clampdown on GVK: Department of Commerce Secretary Rita Teaotia

"This is the legitimate right of every country. So whatever action was taken on Nestle was legitimately within the domain of the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI).
HYDERABAD: Government today rejected suggestions that the five-month ban Swiss giant Nestle's Maggi noodles was in retaliation to EU's clampdown on marketing of 700 generic drugs for alleged manipulation of clinical trials by GVK Bio.
"I don't think that these two issues are at all linked. Many countries take many decisions in what they deem to be appropriate regulatory steps to protect their population," Department of Commerce Secretary Rita Teaotia told reporters on the sidelines of a programme at the Indian School of Business (ISB) here.
"This is the legitimate right of every country. So whatever action was taken on Nestle was legitimately within the domain of the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI).
"Whatever the EU did in the GVK Bio case, whether we liked it or not, whether we protest, it was what they felt was legitimate. They represented their case and we represented our case. I don't think that we can get into tit-for-tat mode," she said.
Regarding the free trade agreement (FTA), she said the EU needs to convince its member countries on some of the issues raised by India to boost two-way commerce and investment.
Teaotia said there have been 16 rounds of discussions up to 2012-13, but there has been a lull since then.
"Now after three years, the negotiators met in January. That negotiation was really a stock taking (of) where we stand and what happened in the last three or four years.
"What the EU requested was that there would be another meeting at my level, which was held a few weeks ago. A lot of discussions had happened earlier. There were just a few issues left for discussion. I think the EU will also agree now that they need to convince all its members," she explained.
On the exports front, she said there has been contraction during the current year on account of global economic slowdown.

தமி ழ கத் தில் இருந்து கேரளா கடத் திய புகை யிலை பொருட் கள் பறி மு தல்

பாலக் காடு,மார்ச்5:
கேரள - தமி ழக எல்லை வாளை யார் அருகே பாம் பாம் பள் ளம் டோல் கேட் பகு தி யில் கலால் துறை சிறப்பு படை அதி கா ரி கள் வாகன தணிக் கை யில் ஈடு பட் டி ருந் த னர். அப் போது கோவை யி லி ருந்து வாளை யார் வழியே பாலக் காடு நோக்கி வந்த தமி ழக அரசு பஸ் சில் பய ணி கள் உடை மை கள் மற் றும் பார் சல் பைகளை அதி கா ரி கள் சோதனை செய் த னர். இதில் தடை செய் யப் பட்ட 3,500 பாக் கெட் புகை யி லை கள் சிக் கி யது. இவை பறி மு தல் செய் யப்ப் ட டது. இது தொடர் பாக யாரும் கைது செய் ய ப ட வில்லை.
இது போல கேரள-தமி ழக எல் லை யான கோபா ல பு ரம் சோத னைச் சா வ டி யில் கலால்த் துறை அதி கா ரி கள் நேற் று முன் தி னம் வாகன தணிக் கை யில் ஈடு பட் டி ருந் த னர். அப் போது பொள் ளாச் சி யி லி ருந்து கோபா ல பு ரம் வழி யாக பாலக் காடு நோக்கி வந்த கேர ள அ ரசு பஸ்சை அதி கா ரி கள் சோத னை யிட் ட னர். இதில் பஸ் சில் மறைத்து வைக் கப் பட் டி ருந்த 1 கிலோ 85 கிராம் கஞ்சா பொட் ட லங் கள் பறி மு தல் செய் த னர்.

Awareness low on impact of carbonated beverages: Experts


Mar 4, 2016

Noodle cos in fresh FSSAI soup

FSSAI (Food Safety and Standards Authority of India) and noodles seem to be not getting along well for some time now. First, it was Nestle’s Maggi, which was banned for the presence of Monosodium Glutamate (MSG) and excess lead content.Then Patanjali got a notice for its‘Atta Noodles’ on the ground that they had a licence for marketing ‘Pasta’ but not ‘Atta Noodles.’ The latest additions to the list appear to be Knorr Soupy Noodles, Horlicks Foodles Noodles and Ching’s Hot Garlic Instant Noodles. These products allegedly have more ash than permissible. As per the food authorities, the prescribed maximum limit of 1% ash has been breached in these products, which is a limit prescribed for pasta products. 
The dispute relating to Nestle’s Maggi was more of a factual dispute regarding the presence of MSG and excess lead, which has been strongly contested on the basis of lab reports, whereas the ones related to Patanjali and the other three are due to lack of clarity about the scope of the food regulations. The basic premise of the notice issued to Patanjali appears to be opposite to the stand taken in the recent disputes reported for Knorr Soupy Noodles, Horlicks Foodles Noodles and Ching’s Hot Garlic Instant Noodles.
Standardised category
The showcause notice to Patanjali was based on the premise that the noodles was not a standardised product allowed under the Food Standards and Additives Regulations and therefore the same could not have been sold without prior approval. Patanjali has argued that the noodle was covered under the standardised category of ‘Pasta/Macaroni Products’ which was broad enough to cover ‘Noodles’; therefore there was no need to obtain any prior approval. In the latest disputes, a totally opposite stand appears to have been taken. Here, the food authorities are assuming that these three kinds of noodles are covered under the category of ‘Pasta/Macaroni Products’ and therefore the prescribed limIt of maximum of 1% of ash has been breached. 
Nature of action
An important question to be answered by the food authorities on this vexed issue is whether ‘Noodle’ is covered under the standardised food category of ‘Pasta/Macaroni Products’ or not. If it is covered, then the prescribed parameters for Pasta will apply and the limit of maximum of 1% of ash has to be maintained. However, in that case the natural corollary would be that the notice issued to Patanjali was incorrect. Meanwhile, if Noodle is not a Pasta product, the question of applying a Pasta standard would not apply. The product will then be covered under the category of ‘Proprietary food’ and the natural corollary would be that the most recent action against the three companies is incorrect.
Guidance notes
Now, the question arises as to why such diametrically opposite views are being taken by the food authorities. First, the reason could be the absence of guidance notes and uniform training of the food authorities for which the responsibility would lie upon the FSSAI and the food commissioners of the states. The present scenario suggests that the food authorities are reading and interpreting the Act and the regulations on their own without the help of any guidance notes issued by the higher authorities. Second, it could be due to the lack of communication/coherence between the Central and state level authorities. This could be the case since the notice in the case of Patanjali was issued by the Central level authorities whereas the immediate action has been taken by the state authorities. Third, it could be due to the improper implementation of the Food Licensing and Registration System (FLRS) or incorrect understanding of the FLRS. Under the FLRS, when a person applies for a licence as a service sector food business operator like distributor/marketer/ retailer/transporter and so on, only broad categories of food items appear in the drop-down list online; whereas, if one applies as a manufacturer, a more detailed list appears. This is probably the reason when Patanjali applied as a marketer, it would have got a licence for ‘Pasta Products’ which is a broader category and not ‘noodles,’ a narrower category under it. The FLRS is based on Food Category system, which categorises all kinds of food stuff in 16 categories. It is hierarchical in nature and different food categories have been described in a four level structure wherein food items have been divided into sub-categories and sub-sub categories. When a person applies for a licence in a service sector category like distributor/marketer/retailer/transporter and so on, only the main category appears. Whereas, when one applies as a manufacturer, a more specific entry (sub-categories or sub-sub categories mentioned under the Indian food code) comes in the drop-down list. If someone applies as a marketer, he would get the broad category of “Pasta Products” but if he applies as manufacturer, he would get more specific options like ‘Fresh Pasta and Noodles’, ‘Dried Pasta and Noodles’, ‘Pre-cooked pasta and Noodles’ and so on. This could be the reason why Patanjali as a marketer had a licence for ‘Pasta Products’ whereas its supporting manufacturer had it for a sub-category like noodles. 
Presence of ash
Having analysed the possible reasons for the contradictory stands being taken by the authorities, let us now examine the merit of the latest disputes. A number of questions come to mind in this context. As per the food authorities, the noodles tested contained more than the maximum prescribed limit of 1% ash and therefore they were sub-standard. The first question is why at all ash is allowed in any kind of food. Ash refers to any inorganic material, such as minerals, present in food. It is called ash because it is the residue that remains after heating removes water and organic materials such as fat and protein. Ash can include both compounds with essential minerals, such as calcium and potassium, and toxic materials, such as lead. Therefore, the presence of ash does not mean that ash in a literal sense is allowed to be added to a food product.
The second question is what effect the excess ash can have on a consumer. The ash content has been reported to be in the range of 1-3% in the three products. It needs to be mentioned that in many standardised food items, it has been allowed in the much higher range of 5-9%. Therefore, ash content exceeding 1% does not necessarily mean that the food is unsafe and it will have an adverse impact on the consumer. It only implies that the noodles cannot fall in the category of a standardised food item like Pasta.
The third question is whether such products are allowed to be manufactured and sold. As on date, a large number of food products in the market fall under the category of non-standardised food products, as only some food products are standardised. Till a few days ago, there was a doubt whether any non-standardised product could be sold without prior approval or not. Thankfully, that doubt has been set to rest by a recent notification of FSSAI wherein non-standardised products using ingredients used in standardised products or standardised additives have been allowed without any need of prior approval. 
The final question is if FSSAI has allowed such non-standardised food products without prior approval, what is the relevance of ash content in excess of the prescribed limit. From the perspective of food safety, it will perhaps not have much relevance because it is not considered unsafe per se. However, from the perspective of the Food Safety and Standards (Packaging and Labelling) Regulations, the marketers might need to make certain adjustments so that the consumer does not get an impression that it is a standardised product. However, for a resolution of the matter the food authorities would have to take a clear stand as to whether ‘Noodles’ fall under the standardised food category of ‘Pasta/Macaroni Products.’ If, the answer is affirmative, the marketer would have to make certain adjustments in the name of the product but then in that scenario the notice issued earlier to Patanjali would become infructuous. If the answer is in the negative, the current dispute involving Knorr Soupy Noodles, Horlicks Foodles Noodles and Ching’s Hot Garlic Instant Noodles would not have enough basis to survive. In either case, it leaves a lot for FSSAI to ponder as to how to avoid such actions based on contradictory interpretations of the law.If the legal tangle is left unresolved by FSSAI, the food industry cannot hope to have any respite for some time.

124 vendors booked for ripening fruits artificially

Food safety officers collected 240 samples of various fruits and filed 124 cases against wholesale and retail fruit vendors who used the hazardous carbide and ethocyn for artificial ripening of fruits, Assistant Food Controller of Rayalaseema Zone Viswanatha Reddy said on Thursday.
Mr. Reddy and officers — Srinivasa Rao and K. Shankar — inspected Kurnool Rythu Bazaar and collected five samples of banana, watermelon, and orange. In all, 26 samples were collected in Kurnool district so far and laboratory reports were awaited, Mr. Viswanatha Reddy said.
A lab report received on Tuesday confirmed use of ethocyn, a liquid pesticide, for ripening banana, which was not permitted. Use of carbide or ethocyn would lead to cancer and gastric disorders, he said. Carbide was not used, but ethylene gas was used to ripen banana, he said.
The government was urged to recruit food safety officers to tide over shortage of staff, Mr. Reddy said.
Social responsibility
He urged the media to expose instances of use of carbide or ethocyn for artificial ripening of fruits as a social responsibility measure.

Artificial fruit ripening on the rise

Kakinada: With the rapid development of fruit trade, artificial ripening of fruits has been rising in East Godavari for some time. It is said that several whole sellers of climacteric fruits like mango, banana, papaya, sapota and custard apple instead of harvesting in a mature and unique condition by allowing them to ripen by nature release of hormone (ethylene) from the fruit are instead opting for artificial ripening methods practiced earlier by small traders through smoking and calcium carbide treatment. 
  • Fruits are put in enclosed chambers where large quantities of calcium carbide is put and water is sprinkled before sealing them
  • Government of India has banned the use of calcium carbide for ripening of fruits under PFA Act 8-44 AA, 1954 
  • The Indian Medical Association , Kakinada chapter president Dr Ram Swaroop Jawaharlal warned that consumption of fruits which were artificially ripened leads to gastritis 
Even traders are said to be opting for this process for lemons and goose berry as well. It is said that these sections are opting for this mode as they found natural ripening in some fruits to be a slow process, which leads to high weight loss. In this process, fruits are being commercially ripened with the banned chemical like calcium carbide which after reaction with water vapour present in the surrounding atmosphere releases acetylene gas. Some traders are ripening fruits like banana in enclosed chambers where large quantities of calcium carbide is put and water is sprinkled before sealing the chambers. 
Though the released acetylene triggers ripening in fruits, it is also put in small packets in the fruit boxes and in some cases sprinkled onto the fruit surface. However, calcium carbide contains chemical impurities such as arsenic hydride and phosphorus hydride that are highly carcinogenic compounds. It is also said that improper use of calcium carbide can therefore cause chemical contamination of fresh produce. 
Further, fruits so ripened develop attractive surface colour, are inferior in taste, flavour and spoil faster. Though the Government of India banned the use of calcium carbide for ripening of fruits under PFA Act 8-44 AA, 1954 the implementation seems to be a much neglected affair. The FSSAI which is the authority to check this practice is said to be facing shortage of staff. 
With Mango season round the corner consumers are more worried as children and aged people opt for these fruits. The Indian Medical Association, Kakinada chapter president Dr Ram Swaroop Jawaharlal warned that consumption of fruits which are artificially ripened leads to gastritis and stomach diseases. In children it will have multiple effects. The government should strictly implement the act and strict vigil should be kept on such activities. Voluntary and service organisations should take the initiative on focusing this health hazard, Dr Jawahar observed.
When contacted, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) Assistant Food Controller and in-charge of six district regions Nageshwarayya said that during January and February they conducted raids at nine places in East Godavari district. These include Kakinada, Rajamahendravaram, Kothapeta Ravulapalem, Aamalapuram, Mandapeta and other places. "With the mango season round the corner we are keeping a close watch on this activity," he said. The shortage of inspectors to conduct frequent raids has been hampering our activity, he added.

Mango lovers, don’t get tempted by the bright yellow sheen!

This season, beware of buying the shiny yellow mangoes that appear fresh out of farm. Instead, they may be straight out of their Carbide treatment.
The Food Safety and Standards officials from the Institute of Preventive Medicine caution that the artificially ripened fruit using Calcium Carbide display spotless lemon-yellow skin, and do not have the sweet aroma of the naturally ripened ones. They look soft, and have shorter shelf life. Further, stem looks green even after the fruit turns yellow.
The same criteria apply to evaluation of bananas too, as they too carry the risk of being ripened with Carbide, the officials said through a presentation on Wednesday, during a press conference organised by the Health department.
The press meet was organised after the High Court asked the government to take measures to spread awareness about the ill effects of carbide-ripening through media. arbide, when reacting with the moisture in the fruit, produces Acetylene gas which quickens the ripening process. However, it contains traces of arsenic and phosphorus hydride which have dangerous effects on human body. Many traders choose carbide because it is freely available at very cheap prices, an official informed.
Consumption of carbide will produce symptoms such as vomiting, diarrhoea with or without blood, burning sensation in chest and abdomen, thirst, weakness, difficulty in swallowing, ulcers on the skin, sores, cough and wheezing, and shortness of breath. Higher exposure may cause pleural effusion and peptic ulcer, and even vendors handling the fruit are not spared from the effects.
Principal Secretary, Health, Medical and Family Welfare, Rajeshwar Tiwari said the government will soon come up with large scale awareness programme about ill effects of carbide-ripening. Banners and posters will be displayed at the market yards and action will be initiated against erring traders as per the provisions of Food Safety and Standards Act, 2011, which entails punishment of six months’ imprisonment and fine of Rs.One lakh, he said.
Department of Agriculture is on the job of having a big Ethylene ripening chamber at the Gaddi Annaram Agricultural Market Yard.

GOVT. CAMPAIGN AGAINST CARBIDE-RIPENED FRUITS

THE TELANGANA GOVERNMENT WILL SOON COME UP WITH LARGE-SCALE AWARENESS PROGRAMME ABOUT ILL EFFECTS OF CARBIDE-RIPENED FRUIT.
Telangana Government has exhorted consumers to be on the watch for fruit ripened using Calcium Carbide which could cause various health problems to those who consume them.
Acting on the High Court’s interim direction to spread awareness among public through media, the Health and Family Welfare Principal Secretary Rajeshwar Tiwari addressed a press conference here on Wednesday and said the Government will soon come up with large-scale awareness programme about ill effects of carbide-ripened fruit.
Action will be initiated against those selling such fruits as per the provisions of the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2011, he said. Alternative provisions include building a large Ethylene ripening chamber at the Gaddi Annaram Agricultural Market Yard at the cost of Rs.60 lakh and assisting six more chambers volunteered by private wholesalers, Mr.Tiwari informed.
A presentation by officials from the Institute of Preventive Medicine cautioned consumers against purchasing fruits such as mango and banana which are overtly soft and flavourless, with spotless yellow skin and green stem, and without the sweet aroma, all of which are characteristic of carbide-ripened fruit.

Expired beer seized from Bevco outlet

Kochi: The food safety department on Wednesday seized over 1,300 bottles of expired beer from a Kerala State Beverages Corporation Ltd (Bevco) outlet at Edappally in Kochi. The bottles had gone past their shelf-life in July, 2015.
Officials said that samples of the seized liquor have been sent to regional chemical analysis laboratory at Kakkanad. The outlet was raided based on specific information that expired beer was being sold at the outlet.
According to officials, a consumer had reported health problems after unknowingly consuming a bottle of expired beer purchased from the outlet.

44% of food samples in last three months found adulterated

Meerut: Out of the total food samples sent to the food testing laboratory in Lucknow in the last three months, the Food Safety and Drugs Administration (FSDA) in Meerut found 44% of the food samples "unsafe", "substandard" or "violating regulations". A total of 25 samples were sent to the food testing laboratory in Lucknow, out of which as many as 11 samples were found to be unsafe.
These samples were mostly taken before Christmas and during New Year celebrations.
"The food items that were found unsafe for consumption include a pastry from Delicious Bakery in Shastri Nagar and ChamCham mithai from Ram Nath Ladoo Wale in Sadar. While the silver balls on the pastry were made of aluminum, the mithai used a banned colour dye - both of them are unsafe for consumption," said JP Singh, chief food safety officer.
The food items which violated regulations of packaging and labelling include vegetable fat sample- one each from Milan Enterprises (Baraut) and Gau Food products (Aligarh), cooking medium from Kalas Food products (Aligarh), Kaju Gajjak packet from Ram Chandra Deewan Chandra Rewari wala (Meerut Cantt) and Rol Gajjak packet from Ram Chandra Sahai Rewari and Sweet shop (Abulane).
The substandard food items included vegetable oil from Food Products Tata Nagar (Aligarh), edible fat from Tonu Enterprises (Kanpur) and Heeng packets - one each from two shops in Shastri Nagar.
"Now, we will notify all the owners who were producing these food items, after which they can send their items for re-testing at Kolkata laboratory, which is our referral lab. But if those tests send out similar reports, those accused of producing unsafe items can get lifetime imprisonment. Violation of regulations carry a fine of Rs 2 lakh, and those selling substandard products will be fined Rs 5 lakh. These proceedings will happen in a month once we file a case," said Singh.

FSDA officials seal cooking oil firm in Karur district

Officials of Food Safety and Drug Administration on Wednesday sealed an oil firm on the complaints of producing adulterated cooking oil.
The firm owned by Palanivel (45) was functioning at Kuttakattuthottam near Athireddypalayam in Karur district.
Sources said on complaints that the firm had been producing adulterated cooking oil, the Food Safety and Revenue officials raided it and seized 21 barrel of oil, 50 kg of caustic soda and so on. The samples were sent to a laboratory in Thanjavur for ascertaining the nature of ingredients, the sources said.

க.பரமத்தி அருகே கலப் பட எண் ணெய் ஆலைக்கு சீல்


க.பர மத்தி, மார்ச் 3:
க.பர மத்தி அருகே கலப் பட எண் ணெய் சுத் தி க ரிப்பு நிறு வ னத் திற்கு உணவு பாது காப்பு அதி கா ரி கள் சீல் வைத் த னர்.
கரூர் மாவட் டம் ஆதி ரெட் டி பா ளை யம் அரு கே யுள்ள குட் டக் காட் டு தோட் டம் பகு தி யில் பழ னி வேல்(45) என் ப வ ருக்கு சொந் த மான இடத் தில் சுகா தா ர மற்ற முறை யில் கலப் பட சமை யல் எண் ணெய் தயா ரித்து விற் பனை செய் வ தாக உணவு பாது காப்பு துறை அதி கா ரி க ளுக்கு தக வல் கிடைத் தது. இதை ய டுத்து மாவட்ட உணவு பாது காப்பு மற் றும் மருந்து நிர் வா கத் துறை மாவட்ட நிய மன அலு வ லர் டாக் டர் மீனாட் சி சுந் த ரம், உணவு பாது காப்பு உதவி ஆய் வா ளர் சுமதி, உணவு கட் டுப் பாட்டு அலு வ லர் சுப் பி ர ம ணி யம்,தாசில் தார் அம் பா யி ர நா தன், க.பர மத்தி இன்ஸ் பெக் டர் ஞான சே க ரன், மண் டல துணை தாசில் தார் மதி வா ணன், ஆர்ஐ சவுந் த ர வள்ளி உள் ளிட்ட அதி கா ரி கள் நேற்று முன் தி னம் இர வும், நேற் றும் தொடர்ந்து அங்கு சென்று ஆய்வு மேற் கொண் ட னர்.
அப் போது அங் கி ருந்த 21 பேரல் எண் ணெய், 50 கிலோ காஸ் டிக் சோடா கொண்ட 37 மூட்டை, கருப் புத் தூள் (பிளாக் ப வு டர்) 21 மூட் டை கள் மற் றும் ரசா ய னங் கள் இருப் பது கண் ட றி யப் பட் டது. அவற் றின் மாதி ரி கள் பரி சோ த னைக்கு சேக ரிக் கப் பட்டு நிறு வ னத் திற்கு சீல் வைக் கப் பட் டது.
இது குறித்து உணவு பாது காப்பு மற் றும் மருந்து நிர் வா கத் துறை மாவட்ட நிய மன அலு வ லர் டாக் டர் மீனாட்சி சுந் த ரம் கூறி ய தா வது,
இங்கு என்ன வித மான பொருட் களை பயன் ப டுத்தி என்ன உற் பத்தி செய் தார் கள் என் பது குறித்து எது வும் தெரி ய வில்லை. இங் குள்ள பொருட் கள் அனைத் தும் சீல் வைக் கப் பட்டு அவற் றின் மாதி ரி கள் சேக ரிக் கப் பட்டு பரி சோ த னைக் காக தஞ்சை அரசு உணவு பகுப் பாய்வு கூடத் திற்கு அனுப் பப் ப டு கி றது. பரி சோ த னைக்கு பிறகு இவை என்ன என் ப தும் அவை தர மா ன தா? கலப் ப டமா என் பது தெரி ய வ ரும் என் றார்.

DINATHANTHI NEWS


க.பரமத்தி அருகே தனியார் எண்ணெய் ஆலையில் அதிகாரிகள் ஆய்வு

க.பரமத்தி அருகே தனியார் எண்ணெய் ஆலையில் கலப்பட சமையல் எண்ணெய் தயாரிக்கப்படுகிறதா என உணவுக் கட்டுப்பாட்டு அதிகாரிகள் புதன்கிழமை ஆய்வு மேற்கொண்டனர்.
கரூர் மாவட்டம், க.பரமத்தியை அடுத்த ஆதிரெட்டிபாளையம் அருகே உள்ள குட்டக்காட்டுதோட்டம் என்ற இடத்தில் தனியாருக்குச் சொந்தமான எண்ணெய் ஆலை உள்ளது. இதே அதே பகுதியைச் சேர்ந்த பழனிவேல் (45) என்பவர் நடத்தி வருகிறார்.
இங்கு கேரளத்தில் இருந்து தரமற்ற சமையல் எண்ணெய்யை வாங்கி வந்து அதை மறுச்சுழற்சி செய்து, உள்ளூர் மற்றும் வெளியூர்களுக்கு விநியோகிப்பதாக கரூர் மாவட்ட உணவுப் பொருள் பாதுகாப்பு அலுவலர் மீனாட்சிசுந்தரத்துக்கு தகவல் கிடைத்தது.
இதையடுத்து மாவட்ட ஆட்சியர் டிபி. ராஜேஷ் உத்தரவின் பேரில், உணவு பொருள் பாதுகாப்பு மற்றும் மருந்து நிர்வாகத் துறை மாவட்ட நியமன அலுவலர் மருத்துவர் மீனாட்சிசுந்தரம், உணவு பாதுகாப்பு உதவி ஆய்வாளர் சுமதி, உணவுக் கட்டுப்பாட்டு அலுவலர் சுப்ரமணியம், வட்டாட்சியர் அம்பாயிநாதன், க.பரமத்தி காவல் ஆய்வாளர் ஞானசேகரன் உள்ளிட்டோர் புதன்கிழமை ஆலையில் திடீர் சோதனை நடத்தினர்.
அங்குள்ள தொட்டியில் இருந்த எண்ணெய்யை ஆய்வுக்கு எடுத்துக் கொண்டனர். பின்னர் அங்கு 21 பேரல் இருந்த ஆயில் மற்றும் தலா 50 கிலோ எடை கொண்ட காஸ்டிக்சோடா கொண்ட 37 மூட்டை ஆகியவற்றை பறிமுதல் செய்தனர்.
இதுதொடர்பாக உணவு பொருள் பாதுகாப்பு மற்றும் மருந்து நிர்வாகத் துறை மாவட்ட நியமன அலுவலர் மருத்துவர் மீனாட்சிசுந்தரம் கூறியது:
ஆலையில் போலியான சமையல் எண்ணெய் தயாரிப்பதாக கிடைத்த தகவலையடுத்து ஆய்வு செய்தோம். இங்கிருந்து சந்தேகப்படும்படியாக இருந்த பொருட்களை பறிமுதல் செய்துள்ளோம். ஆய்வுக்கு எடுத்துக்கொண்ட எண்ணெய் தஞ்சாவூர் அரசு உணவு பகுப்பாய்வு கூடத்துக்கு அனுப்ப உள்ளோம். பரிசோதனை முடிவில் எண்ணெய் தரம் குறித்து தெரிய வரும், அதற்கேற்ப நடவடிக்கை எடுக்கப்படும் என்றார்.

சமையல் ஆயிலில் கலப்படம்: உணவு பாதுகாப்பு துறை அதிரடி

பரமத்தி: சமையல் ஆயிலில் கலப்படம் செய்வதற்காக பயன்படுத்தப்பட்ட காஸ்டிக் சோடா, பிளாக் பவுடர் உள்ளிட்டவற்றை, உணவு பாதுகாப்பு துறையினர் அதிரடியாக பறிமுதல் செய்தனர்.
கரூர் மாவட்டம், க.பரமத்தி அடுத்த, ஆதிரெட்டிபாளையத்தில் பி.பி.தேங்காய் எண்ணெய் தயாரிப்பு நிறுவனத்தை பழனிவேல், 45 என்பவர் நடத்தி வருகிறார். கடந்த சில நாட்களாக, கேரளாவிலிருந்து சமையல் ஆயிலை வாங்கி வந்து, அதை மறுசுழற்சி முறையில் எண்ணெயாக தயாரித்து, மீண்டும் விற்பனை செய்து வருவதாக, கரூர் உணவு கட்டுப்பாட்டு துறையினருக்கு புகார் சென்றது. அதயைடுத்து, மாவட்ட கலெக்டர் ராஜேஷ் உத்தரவின் பேரில், உணவு பாதுகாப்பு துறை நியமன அலுவலர் மீனாட்சிசுந்தரம் தலைமையிலான குழுவினர், நேற்று அந்த நிறுவனத்தை ஆய்வு மேற்கொண்டனர். அப்போது, சமையல் எண்ணெய் தயாரிக்க பயன்படுத்த இருப்பு வைத்துள்ள, 21 பேரல்கள், 50 கிலோ எடை கொண்ட, 37 மூட்டை காஸ்டிக் சோடா பவுடர், பிளாக் பவுடர், 21 மூட்டைகள் ஆகியவகைளை பறிமுதல் செய்து விசாரித்து வருகின்றனர்.

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