Sep 13, 2014

Dangerous roadside delights

Foodies devour unhygienic street fare
Law enforcers look away, as rule books rot.These are eyesores dotting urban spaces and cannot be banished. Street foods are a way and part of our lives; they provide a medium for integrating rural and urban areas economically, socially and culturally. Unfettered expansion of towns and cities, teeming migration of labour force from hinterland and rural areas and paucity of time have all led to escalation of make-shift eateries that encroach pavements and berms along roads. Unlicenced hawkers sell ready-to-eat food that finds instant takers, mainly with the working class and themillenials, whogobble them, unmindful of their health and environment.
Consumers are not perturbedabout how and where these vendors perch their tables, stalls, stands or push-carts or kiosks- be it adjoining open toilets, drains choked with stagnating water and floating filth or flies milling around. The scenario looks alike, be it any metropolis or township. Change in their schedules, tastes, eating habits and attitudes towards food consumption have forced people, mostly low-income, to seek these food joints, which are accessible, affordable and palatable. Food safety and hygiene are hardly their concern. Street foods are a major public health risk due to lack of basic infrastructure and services, difficulty in controlling the large numbers of vending operations because of their diversity, mobility and temporary nature.
It is not the poor alone who gorge on these food. Street food is a low-cost meal for a bulk of students; they love it for it ‘unmatched taste’, found a study last year by the Institute of Home Economics, Delhi University, that covered students aged 18-23. The study, which covered 500 consumers and 250 street food vendors across the city, showed more than half of them fell ill and 43 per cent took medication. A majority (63 per cent) were aware of adulterated ingredients and food-borne diseases.
Several epidemiological studies suggest that street foods contribute to a significant number of food poisoning. Vendors lack adequate knowledge and understanding of basic food safety issues and norms. Consequently, improper handling of food results in microbial contamination. Major sources contributing to this are the place of preparation, utensils for cooking and serving, raw materials, water, time and temperature abuse of cooked foods and vendors’ personal hygiene. A study by FAO and All India Institute of Hygiene and Public Health found that street foods in Kolkata were prone to microbiological contamination.
The standard plate count (SPC- which is used as an indicator of the level of bacteria in dairy products) of samples of lassi, idli and dahivada, made by fermentation, was very high compared to samples of other products tested. Escherichia coli, an indicator of faecal contamination, were detected in 55 per cent of the samples tested. ‘The presence of E. coli raises a suspicion of improper food handling practices.’ The hazards in some other samples were because of poor personal hygiene, prolonged holding, repeated handling and the use of substandard water and implements at different stages.
Laws to regulate street food exist but are thrown into the bin. Cops and municipal food inspectors look askance once they get their mamool or hafta and enjoy free lunch.The Food Safety and Standards (FSS) Act 2006, enforced on 5 August 2011 across the country, is yet to be implemented properly. The rules stipulate that every food business with an annual turnover below Rs 12 lakh is to be registered with the state health department. Those earning more will need a license to operate. The deadline for registering and issuing a licence to street vendors was revised to February 2014 by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI). Those failing to get a licence were to either close down their business or shell out heavy penalties ranging from Rs 25,000 to Rs 10 lakh if they continue without licence or registration. With the deadline long passed and no penal action imposed, vendors continue to flourish.
On the law enforcement side, the scenario is grim. The existing facilities at the authorised laboratories are unacceptably inadequate and do not conform to international food safety benchmarks, norms and practices.
Just four laboratories exist for food testing- two under the Central Health Ministry, one under the CSIR, and another under the Maharashtra government. Scientific protocols to maintain high standards of accuracy, reliability and credibility in operation of laboratory are in disarray. Besides, the quality audit system and surveillanceto achieve and maintain the required level of quality and its reliability leave much to be desired.
The FSSAI policies have not been properly implemented. The laboratories function in a complex and chaotic manner in the absence of standard operating procedures; with little regard to inter-lab collaboration. Besides, there is no specialised legal expertise to enable appropriate projection of scientific issues in a realistic and convincing manner when such issues are brought up in courts.
The government has not issued, till date, the Food Authority Gazette notification, defining the terms of reference and scope, in respect of private laboratories involved in food testing.

Food safety officials warn jaggery producers against adulteration

Food safety officials have warned jaggery producers not to involve in manufacturing adulterated items that are harmful for consumption.
There are 272 jaggery producers in the district with more than 90 per cent present in Karuppur area. About 50 to 75 farmers own their own sugarcane field and the processing units while the rest purchase sugarcane from farmers and run their units. They produce around 155 tonne jaggery everyday and sell it in wholesale market in Shevapet.
White sugar, super phosphate, chemical dye, soda power and chemicals are mixed by one group of manufacturers to produce bright yellow jaggery.
This adulterated jaggery is sold at Rs. 1,350 for a 31 kg pack. But jaggery in pale and dark colours, produced without adding sugar or other chemicals, is sold for Rs. 1,050 for a 31 kg pack in the market.
Members of Karuppur Zone Jaggery Manufacturer Farmers Association said that though they produced jaggery without adulterating the contents, they were not getting the right price.
“Increase in labour cost, manufacturing cost results in loss to us. Adulteration should be stopped and all should get the fair price”, they added.
As per the Food Safety and Standard Regulations, 2011 (Food Product Standards and Food Additives), a maximum of 70 ppm sulphur dioxide is allowed in the preparation of jaggery.
But of the nine samples taken from producers and at retail outlets, the presence of sulphur dioxide was between 350 to 1,500 ppm.
Consumption of these jaggery will lead to health problems and even cancer, warns, T. Anuradha, District Designated Officer, Tamil Nadu Food Safety and Drug Administration Department.
She told The Hindu that very harmful to health and producers were warned sufficiently not to use white sugar during production of jaggery.
The department has asked merchants not to purchase adulterated jaggery. A meeting was held on Wednesday in which 150 producers have given written assurances that they would not involve in such activities.
There are 272 jaggery producers in Salem district with more than 90 per cent in Karuppur area

காலாவதியான 8,000 குளிர்பான பாட்டில் பறிமுதல் செய்து அழிப்பு

தலைவாசல்: தலைவாசல் பகுதியில், ஹோட்டல், டீக்கடை மற்றும் குடோன்களில், காலாவதியான நிலையில் விற்கப்பட்ட, 8,000 குளிர்பான பாட்டில்களை, உணவு பாதுகாப்பு துறை அதிகாரிகள் பறிமுதல் செய்து, அழித்தனர்.
மாவட்ட உணவு பாதுகாப்பு துறை, மாவட்ட நியமன அலுவலர் டாக்டர் அனுராதா தலைமையிலான, உணவு பாதுகாப்பு அலுவலர்கள், தலைவாசல் பஸ் ஸ்டாண்ட், பட்டுத்துறை, சார்வாய், மும்முடி, ஆறகளூர் கிராமங்களில் உள்ள, ஹோட்டல், டீ, மளிகை, பெட்டிக்கடை மற்றும் கூல்டிரிங்ஸ் ஏஜன்சி குடோன்களில், நேற்று ஆய்வு செய்தனர். அப்போது, பட்டுத்துறை கிராமத்தில், கலைச்செல்வன் ஏஜன்சி குடோனில், காலாவதியான நிலையில், தயாரிப்பு தேதியை மாற்றி விற்பனை செய்வதற்கு அடுக்கி வைத்திருந்த, 4,500 கூல்டிரிங்ஸ் பாட்டில்களை, பறிமுதல் செய்தனர்.
அதேபோல், காட்டுக்கோட்டை ரகுநாதன் கூல்டிரிங்ஸ், அண்ணாமலை, முத்தையா ஏஜன்சி, மும்முடி கனிஷ்கா ஹோட்டல், தலைவாசல் பஸ் ஸ்டாண்ட் ஹோட்டல், டீ கடைகளில், 3,500 கூல்டிரிங்ஸ் பாட்டில்களை பறிமுதல் செய்தனர். பறிமுதல் செய்யப்பட்ட, 8,000 கூல்டிரிங்ஸ் பாட்டில்களை, சரக்கு வாகனத்தில் ஏற்றிச் சென்று, அழித்தனர். தொடர்ந்து, தலைவாசல், மும்முடி பகுதியில் உள்ள, ஹோட்டல்களில், பால் பாக்கெட், தயிர், பாதாம் பால் உள்ளிட்ட உணவு பொருட்களை ஆய்வு செய்தனர். தரமற்ற உணவு பொருட்களை பறிமுதல் செய்து, அழித்தனர்.காலாவதியான கூல்டிரிங்ஸ் விற்பனை செய்த ஐந்து பேருக்கு, உணவு பாதுகாப்பு துறை அதிகாரிகள், "நோட்டீஸ்' வழங்கியதோடு, மறு ஆய்வில், காலாவதி மற்றும் தரமற்ற உணவு பொருட்கள் கண்டறியப்பட்டால், கடுமையான நடவடிக்கை எடுக்கப்படும் என, எச்சரித்துச் சென்றனர்.

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