Apr 30, 2016

India wants to show off its culinary pride

Soldiers of Mughal King Zahiruddin Muhammad Babar, who conquered Delhi in 1526AD, were keen to return to Kabul because they missed street food. Records of that era say Babar, himself a food connoisseur, kept them happy by arranging it — and established a dynasty that ruled for three centuries. 
This anecdote may be real or apocryphal. Little is known about how people in olden times ate if they did not have a kitchen or were travelling. It is known, however, that they bathed and prayed before touching food. Old records talk of a preference for fruits, since who cooked and what mattered. 
British sociologist Henrike Donner writes about Indians’ “marked distinction between food that could be eaten outside, especially by women”, and the food prepared and eaten at home, with some non-Indian food being too “strange” or tied too closely to non-vegetarian preparation methods to be made at home. 
It is possible that each invasion from the northwest introduced different types of food. Babur’s advent was one such event. India has since imbibed a lot of culinary culture from beyond its western frontiers broadly identified as “Mughlai” food. 
It is today integral to what is consumed mainly in India’s north, but its popularity has no real barriers. Contemporary variations from Turkey, Lebanon and other places have added to the fare. 
Street food is the preferred thing for many Indians, who are vegetarians and do not cook it at home, but enjoy non-vegetarian food outside. They are jokingly blamed for the high prices of meat/fish/foul dishes. 
Such hubs are located in the old quarters of a city. Street food is available there late into the evenings. It is priced reasonably and is roaring business for the vendors. 
Day-time street food is different. It caters to the office-goers and to school and college kids. An hour before the lunch break and an hour after — it is brisk business. 
Street food during festivals like Deepavali or Holi is common across India. Special food, particularly sweets, are readied days in advance. Much of the Iftar during Ramadan comes in the form of street food that attracts non-Muslim foodies as well. 
Along with long years of this “Look-West”, Indian traders and travellers also “Looked East”. 
Chinese food, essentially Cantonese since people from that region had set up shop in India, is popular. Its local variations, difficult to recognise or identify by the Chinese, all spiced up, can be had at any street corner in an Indian city. 
They add to a wide variety of indigenous street food from different regions — cooked, uncooked, vegetarian, non-vegetarian, salty and sour, sweets of a vast variety, go with non-alcoholic beverages that suite the weather. 
Food stalls and wayside kiosks abound, as anywhere else. Street food is not just for a meal, but also to excite taste buds after a meal. Late evening and even post-midnight, people throng at street corners and entire bazaars dedicated to food. And it is good business. 
As India gets rapidly urbanised and women go out to work, having to eat out makes street food welcome. Undoubtedly, the lady of the house, even if she goes out to work, takes time off for preparing packed meals since street food is frowned upon as “unhealthy”. 
Now, with glamour attached to food, many luxury restaurants and boutique hotels have renovated their menus, adding the street food flavour. It is becoming a favourite among travellers who may have hygiene concerns about what is sold on the street. 
Hygiene can be an issue if the street food is not regulated and businesses are not provided necessary facilities. Last month, India’s Health Minister J.P. Nadda launched the “Clean Street Food” project to sensitise producers and vendors about health and hygiene to raise food safety standards. 
The project is the baby of the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI). 
Globalisation has changed the flavour of street food. 
In 2002, Coca Cola reported that China, India and Nigeria were some of its fastest growing markets; markets where the company’s expansion efforts included training and equipping mobile street vendors to sell its products. 
The thrust in the recent years has been and to share, and learn a thing or two from others about how to make street food popular. 
Organised under the umbrella of the National Association of Street Food Vendors of India (NASVI), Indian vendors, some of them in this father-to-son business for generations, are exploring local and foreign markets. A large NASVI team made a beeline to Singapore last year. They are now preparing for Manila, the Philippines, to participate in the World Street Food Congress. 
Last year, the Philippines organised Madrid Fusion Manila (MFM), a global gastronomy event. 
Manila will again be the venue for the World Street Food Congress where street food managers, hawkers and vendors from India will display their wares. 
India is taking the cue from many Southeast Asian nations to promote food tourism through festivals and global events, such as the World Food Congress. Travel companies, chefs and street vendors from across the world take part in such festivals. Among them is George Town in Penang, with streets lined with food stalls. 
Taipei’s streets teem with vendors serving tantalising noodle soups, dumplings and steamed buns. Bangkok, too, has a vibrant street food culture. The organisation’s diary for participation and marketing lists Taipei, Hanoi, Penang, Phnom Penh, Bangkok, Manila, Seoul, Gukuoda (Japan), Singapore and Xian (China). 
At George Town in Penang, the variety of items to be displayed includes assam laksa, hokkein mee and rojak. These are among the world’s best food destinations. 
Delhi is lagging behind Southeast Asia, admits Arvind Singh, coordinator of NASVI. The sharing helps in improving services, packaging, marketing, hygiene, presentation and etiquette, says Rajan Johri, who runs a firm exclusively to train people in these areas. 
Mahendra Ved is NST’s New Delhi correspondent, the newly-elected president of the Commonwealth Journalists Association, and a consultant with ‘Power Politics’ magazine

பிராய்லர் சிக்கன் ஏற்படுத்தும் சிக்கல்

பிராய்லர் கோழிகள் 40 நாட்களில் வளர்க்கப்பட்டு விற்பனைக்கு வந்துவிடுகிறது. கோழிகளை வளர்ப்பதற்கு 12 விதமான கெமிக்கல்ஸ் அதற்கு கொடுக்கப்படும் உணவோடு கலந்து கொடுக்கப்படுகிறது.
கோழிகளுக்கு நோய்கள் வரக்கூடாது என்பதற்காக அதிகளவு ஆன்ட்டிபயாடிக் மருந்துகள் கொடுக்கப்படுகிறது. இதனால் கோழிகளுக்கு வரும் நோயை குணப்படுத்த முடியாமல் போவதோடு, அந்த இறைச்சியை சாப்பிடும் மனிதர்களுக்கும் நோய்க்கூறுகள் தோன்றுகின்றன என்று சி.எஸ்.இ நடத்திய ஆய்வில் தெரியவந்துள்ளது.
கோழிகள் அதிக சதையோடு வளர்வதற்கு பல்வேறு விதமான மருந்துகளை ஊசிகளின் மூலம் கோழிகளுக்கு செலுத்துகிறார்கள். அதனால் அதை உண்ணும் ஆண்களின் விந்துவில் உள்ள உயிரணுக்கள் அழிக்கப்படுகிறது. பெண்குழந்தைகள் பத்து, பதினோரு வயதிலேயே பருவமடைந்துவிடுகிறார்கள். பிராய்லர் கோழியின் சதையில் கெட்ட கொழுப்பு அதிக அளவில் உள்ளது. இதை நாம் சாப்பிடும் போது நம் உடலில் கெட்ட கொழுப்புச் சத்து அதிகளவில் சேருகின்றன.
இந்த கெட்ட கொழுப்பானது, நமது கல்லீரலில் வீக்கத்தையும் ரத்த அழுத்தத்தையும் ஏற்படுத்துகிறது. 100ல் 65 பேருக்கு கொழுப்பு நிறைந்த ஈரல் நோய் உள்ளது. பிராய்லர் கோழியை சாப்பிடுவதால் சிறுநீரகங்ளிலும் கல்லீரலிலும் கேன்சர் நோய் மற்றும் குடல் புற்று நோயும் உருவாகிறதாம்.
இன்றைக்கு நாம் அதிக அளவு லெக் பீஸைத்தான் விரும்பி சாப்பிடுகிறோம். அமெரிக்க கம்பெனிகளும் லெக் பீஸைதான் நம்மிடம் முன்னிறுத்துகிறது. அதிலிருக்கும் அரசியல் மிக முக்கியமானது. கோழிகளின் கால்பகுதியில் அதிக அளவு கொலஸ்ட்ரால் கன்ட்டன்ட் இருக்கிறது. வயிற்று பகுதியில் குறைவாகத்தான் இருக்கிறது. அதனால்தான் அமெரிக்கர்கள் கோழிக்கால்களை சாப்பிடமாட்டார்கள். உடலுக்கு தீங்கு விளைவிக்கும் கோழிக்கால்களை அவர்கள் வெறும் கழிவு பொருளாகத் தான் கருதுகிறார்கள்.
பெரிய நிறுவனங்கள் விளம்பரங்களின் மூலம் நம்மை கோழி கால்களுக்கு அடிமைப்படுத்தி விட்டார்கள். கோழிக்கறி என்றாலே லெக் பீஸ்தான் நம் நினைவுக்கு வருகிறது. அந்த லெக்பீஸ் நமக்கு மிக விரைவில் ரத்த அழுத்ததை ஏற்படுத்திவிடும்.

Unsafe food stalls a hit among rich and famous for late night supper

Surat: A well-known roadside food cart located at Athwalines, known for its pav bhaji, is thronged by Surat's rich and famous for late night supper. They sit on the bonnet of their BMWs and savour the food brimming with butter and cheese. For them eating at roadside stalls where food is cooked in an unhygienic environment with stray dogs and litter around, is a habit and way of life.
Similar situation prevails in areas like Rander, Kahu Galli, Adajan, Udhna, Gaurav Path and even the newly developed Vesu and new City Light areas. This has resulted around 12-15% increase in number of stomach related ailments and cases of food poisoning during summer.
A food cart selling omelettes and other egg preparations at Adajan Patiya is abuzz during night time. Customers have a minimum waiting period of 10-15 minutes to get what they have ordered . However, when it comes to hygiene, not much can be said about the joint.
"People don't want to drink water in disposable glasses as it costs a little extra. Also, they don't want disposable dishes and spoons. What can we do?" asks Baldev Jivan, who runs a Chinese food cart on University Road. People demand food in glass plates that are washed and re-washed in the same water the entire evening. Many demand tea or sugarcane juice in glasses that are used and re-used to save a little money. "There are people who demand even panipuri in mineral water, but they don't see the hands of the person who serves them and then they complaint of stomach discomfort," said Dr Aashish Niak, chief health officer, Surat Municipal Corporation (SMC).

Food adulteration

Sir,
Kindly refer to the news “HC castigates Govt on food adulteration” (DE 26th April, 2016).While rejecting the compliance report of the concerned authorities court observed to the State Counsel that “people do not matter for you but money matters for you.”It is a matter of grave concern that the Food Safety and Standards Act (FSS Act 2006) is applicable to whole country including J&K but due to lack of scientific facilities for checking and testing the contaminated food items like food testing laboratories, equipments, manpower both technical and non- technical the situation of adulteration has been aggravated. Due to consumption of different food items which are contaminated and carcinogenic, lakhs of people suffer from terminal diseases in our state.
It is pertinent to mention here that Court on last date of hearing had sought information regarding number of officers/ officials who are required to be posted in terms of FSS Act 2006 and how many such officers have actually been placed. Court had also sought full particulars of all those persons/companies/ corporations etc who are manufacturing and processing any food items in the state and how many of them have been convicted and sentenced under the FSS Act. But in compliance report no such information was submitted except intimating the location of two testing laboratories one is situated at Dalgate Srinagar and other one at Patoli Mangotrian, Jammu. It is submitted that four years ago an assurance was given by the Govt in one of the PILs dealing with the issue that there would be full- fledged Food Commissioner in a short span of time but till now no such Commissioner has been posted and Commissioner/ Secretary Health and Medical Education is holding additional charge of the Food Commissioner. This shows that how much the Govt of the state is serious about the health of the people of the state. Govt has enough money to purchase new vehicles for the ministers and other VVIPs but has no money to install new food testing laboratories, equipments, manpower etc to save the precious lives. Let us all hope that the present Govt will take some remedial measures to arrest the menace of food adulteration in the state to provide pure and hygienic food after proper checking and testing.
Yours etc…..
S.S.Jamwal, SAO (Rtd)
New Plots, Jammu

Boredom pushes you towards junk food

 
If you have nothing interesting to do, chances are you will be drawn towards chips and cookies despite being full, according to a recent study.
The research by Dr. Sandi Mann from the University of Central Lancashire (UCLan) found that people crave fatty and sugary foods when they are bored.
Dr. Mann and her fellow authors, Faye Ibbitson and Ben Edwards, also from UCLan, conducted two studies of boredom and food choices.
In the first study the researchers asked 52 participants to complete a questionnaire on their food preferences before and after completing the boredom-inducing task of repeatedly copying the same group of letters.
In the second study they asked 45 participants to watch either a boring or a funny video, during which a range of healthy and unhealthy snacks were available. The bowls were weighed before and after each trial to how much of each snack had been eaten.
The results from the first study showed people were more likely to express a preference for unhealthy foods like crisps, sweets and fast food after completing the boring task.
The results from the second study showed that the participants who had watched the boring video ate significantly more unhealthy food.
Dr. Mann said that these results strengthen the theory that boredom is related to low levels of the stimulating brain chemical dopamine and that people try to boost this by eating fat and sugar if they cannot alleviate their boredom in some other way.
Dr. Mann noted, "People designing health education campaigns to encourage us to make healthier food choices need to take boredom, including boredom in the workplace, into account. Bored people do not eat nuts."
The study is being presented at the Annual Conference of the British Psychological Society.

Apr 29, 2016

Only 10 food inspectors for a city of 50 Lakh

Surat: With an estimated 40% of Surtis dining out on weekends and during public holidays, quality of food served at roadside eateries becomes utmost important. But the health wing of the Surat Municipal Corporation (SMC) that is entrusted with the job of ensuring this is severely short-staffed.
To add to the misery, the city with a population of over 50 lakh does not have a state-level food testing and sampling laboratory. The SMC has to send food samples to Rajkot and Bhuj for testing. Moreover, the officials do not have powers to penalise those found violating the food safety norms.
Impediments like these makes it difficult for the SMC health department to conduct checks on thousands of roadside eateries and food stalls that have cropped up all over the city. Out of the 11 sanctioned posts of food inspectors, one is vacant, while SMC has demanded 11 more posts from the state government. As per norm, there has to be one food inspector for population of one lakh.
"It is physically impossible to check all the food joints in the city even once during a year," said a top health official from SMC. "Majority of the food carts do brisk business during the night and we have to constitute a special team and conduct a special drive to go and check these carts," he added.
"Physically it is impossible to be present everywhere with present manpower," said Dr Aashish Niak, chief health officer, SMC. adding, "If we take food samples, we have to send them to Bhuj or Rajkot to get it analysed. If we have a lab here we can take action fast."
He further said with just handful of food inspectors at any given time not more than two teams (with three inspectors each) are out in field checking the food quality. "How can one expect proper food safety standards?" he asked. Moreover, there is no provision of fine against food joint owners for not maintaining cleanliness and hygiene. "They are just issued notices to make them realize their responsibility," added Niak. Food inspectors said that during inspection they check damaged flooring to clothes of cooks and workers, and even their nails.

உண்ணக்கூடிய பேக்கேஜிங்யை அறிமுகப்படுத்துகிறது கேஎப்சி

உணவுப்பொருளுடன் சேர்த்து அப்படியே சாப்பிடக் கூடிய `புட் பேக்கேஜிங் மெட்டீரியலை பரிசோதனை முறையில் பெங்களூர்-ல் அறிமுகபடுத்த உள்ளது கெண்டகி பிரைட் சிக்கன் (கேஎப்சி)
கர்நாடக அரசின் ‘பிளாஸ்டிக் வேண்டாம்’ கொள்கையுடன் இணைந்து, கேஎப்சி இந்த வாரம் பெங்களூர் நகரத்தில் அதன் சோதனையை தொடங்கும். பின் வாடிக்கையாளர்களின் பதில் அடிப்படையில் மற்ற நகரங்களுக்கு விரிவுபடுத்தப்படும்.
முதல் கட்டமாக டார்ட்டில்லா ரைஸ் பவுல் (tortilla rice bowl) மட்டும் ரைஸ் பவுல்களின் விற்பனையை அதிகரிக்க அப்படியே சாப்பிடக் கூடிய `புட் பேக்கேஜிங் மெட்டீரியலை கொண்டு அறிமுகப்படுத்தப்படும் என கூறப்பட்டுள்ளது.
பிளாஸ்டிக் கிண்ணங்கள் கப்புகள் போன்றவற்றில் இருந்து பேப்பர்-க்கு மாறியுள்ள நிலையில் மேலும் பேக்கேஜிங் துறையில் பிளாஸ்டிக் பயன்பாட்டை குறைக்க இது உதவும் என நம்பப்படுகிறது.

Today in Parliament

Labelling of Food Products 
The Food Safety and Standards (Packaging and labelling) Regulations, 2011 prescribe the manner of marking and labelling of foods under section 23 of the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006. So far, three amendments have been carried out in the said regulations for i) mandatory display of Food Safety and Standards Authority of India’s logo and license number; ii) declaration of trans fats and saturated fats in hydrogenated vegetable oils; and iii) declaration of Plant Stanols and Trehalose, in packages of certain food products. 
The Health Minister, Shri J P Nadda stated this in a written reply in the Lok Sabha here today.

FSSAI Act
Random sampling and testing of food products including pan masala etc., is undertaken by the officials of Food Safety Departments of the respective States/UTs to check compliance of the standards laid down under the Food Safety and Standards (FSS) Act, 2006 and Regulations thereunder. In cases, where the food samples are found to be non-conforming to the prescribed standards, recourse is taken to penal provisions under Chapter IX of the FSS Act, 2006. Regulation No. 2.3.4 of the Food Safety and Standards (Prohibition and Restriction on sales) Regulations, 2011, provides that Tobacco and nicotine should not be used as ingredients in any food products. No separate data with regard to pan Masala and tobacco content is centrally maintained by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India. 
The Health Minister, Shri J P Nadda stated this in a written reply in the Lok Sabha here today.

Food for thought Rethinking - FSSAI critical, but need central control

Given the egg that the food regulator has on its face after the Maggi misadventure, it is obvious the system needs a complete overhaul. And that, according to a Business Standard report, is also what Ashish Bahuguna who heads the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has advocated. In a note on the issue, he suggested that all powers of enforcement be devolved to the state governments—in this scenario, the central body will have no enforcement machinery and its job will be mostly restricted to setting standards. Bahuguna has also recommended using a lot more private laboratories instead of just relying on government laboratories.
The FSSAI chief later distanced himself from the note, saying that while a complete overhaul of the food regulatory system is called for, the idea of the note was more to provoke people into thinking out of the box. That is a laudable objective and every attempt has to be made to fix the system which had become so oppressive that a central minister was compelled to come out in the open against it at the height of the Maggi controversy. It would, however, be a mistake to delegate too many powers from the centre to the states when it comes to this kind of regulation—indeed, in the Maggi case, the larger part of the problem arose from various state laboratories giving different test results. While the states certainly have to be involved in order to regulate more effectively, it is imperative that the FSSAI’s capabilities be enhanced. This can be done by, for instance, the FSSAI coming out with norms for different foods and various protocols for testing of foods and then using more private laboratories for doing the actual tests—a system of accreditation of laboratories with periodic checks on their quality is the way to go. Indeed, when the drugs regulator cracked down on various combination drugs some time ago, it was found that some of these had been approved of by various state drug regulators—in even the drug regulatory system, there is an overlap between central and state regulators. In the electricity sector, similarly, while the central electricity regulator has done very good quality work over the years, the state level regulators have, by and large, failed to deliver and are in many ways responsible for the mess the sector is in. In the regulatory system, at least, decentralisation of powers doesn’t seem to be a good idea.

SC stay no license for manufacturing adulterated food: HC

CS summoned, impleaded in PIL
SRINAGAR, Apr 28: The State High Court today made it clear that the stay of proceedings by the Supreme Court doesn’t not mean that food processing companies have license to manufacture and process adulterated food.
The Division Bench of Justice MH Attar and Justice Ali Mohammad Magrey today said that stay granted by Supreme Court in favour of food processing companies in food adulteration case doesn’t give them license to manufacture unsafe foods. “The Act of 2006 is not stayed by the Supreme Court”, court added.
“In the aforesaid circumstances appearing in this case, the staying of proceedings in earlier PIL by the Supreme Court would not prevent this court from taking up the cause of the people of the State, who are continuously made to consume the adulterated food and some of the persons/companies continue to manufacture and product and process adulterated food items”, Court said.
The High Court said: “Court said it is making an earnest effort to ensure that the menace of supplying adulterated food to the consumers by the companies, that produce and process food, is stopped but on the motion of these companies the Supreme Court stayed the proceedings in that PIL and in view of the Supreme Court direction this court could not proceed further.”
Court said after the recent revelation through media report about alarming food adulteration and rise in diseases like cancer in the State, it took cognizance of these reports in shape of fresh PIL on menace of food adulteration.
The bench summoned Chief Secretary before the court and impleaded him, all food processing and manufacturing unit holders as party respondents to the PIL.
Court in order to ensure provisions of the ‘Food Safety and Standards Act 2006’ impleaded Chief Secretary, Commissioner/ Secretary Health, Commissioner Food Safety, Financial Commissioner Finance & Planning and owners of food manufacturing units whose particulars were given by the State to the court.
“In order to ensure that provisions of the Act of 2006 and rules made there under are effectively implemented at the ground level” adding “to further ensure that the menace of producing /processing and supplying adulterated food to the consumers is, at once, stopped”, the Division Bench said while summoning the CS before the court.
Court directed all those food processing unit holders to file affidavits before next date of hearing of the PIL, on how and in what way they are following the provisions of Food Safety Act and rules. “They shall also provide information about the laboratories set up in their units, the equipment installed therein and the number of persons, having expertise in accordance with the Act and Rules, working in such laboratories”, court directed all food processing and manufacturing unit holders.
Court sought information on affidavit on supply of milk per day from the companies and units and the source of procurement of such milk.
Court directed these food manufacturing and processing units to undertake before the Registrar Judicial of the court that they will supply food items to the consumers which are fit for human consumption. “They shall also undertake that in the event it is, prima facie, found that food items are adulterated, then their units may be liable to be sealed”, reads the order.
Court also directed the hoteliers, restaurant owners and shopkeepers to ensure supply of safe food to consumers as the court is guardian and sentinel of rights of the people. It said that it will continue to pursue with all its earnestness for the noble cause.
Court said the status report of the respondents is enough to indicate that the people of this State have been left at the mercy of God as for the checking of adulterated food neither there is effective and adequate number of laboratories nor the requisite equipment. “Even the manpower, in terms of the Act and rules, in its full strength, is not available. It appears that appointments have not been made in accordance with law till date”, court said.
Underscoring the importance of Constitution which the court said has given all the Constitutional, statutory and administrative authorities to hold their positions in trust for the benefit of people. “The constitution has created the institutions for the welfare of those people who gave it to themselves. This court is one such creation of the Constitution”, court added.
Referring to the Article 21 of the Indian Constitution, which guarantees the right of life to everyone in all respects and in a pure manner, Court said: “No one has right to manufacture, produce and sell adulterated food as it has direct impact on the human health and every human being has inherent and unchallengeable right to lead a healthy life.”
Court said this right, however, is abridged and shortened by the ‘soulless persons’ by producing, manufacturing and supplying unsafe and adulterated food to the people.
Mentioning its earlier efforts to curb the food adulteration, Court reminded that in 2013 on the report of Food Safety Kashmir (Deputy Commissioner) which revealed that the toned Khyber milk processed by M/S Khyber Agro Pvt Ltd, Turmeric powder manufactured by Avon Agro Industries Pvt Ltd and Saunf Powder processed and sold by Kanwal Agro Food Industries were found unsafe, misbranded and substandard due to presence of detergent, tartrazine(coloring matter) and Carmoisini/Tartrazine in these food items.
Thereafter court said the report and result of these food items was directed to be sent to Director SKIMS to find out the nature of diseases which can be caused by the aforesaid adulterated food products.
Director SKIMS as directed by the court submitted its report about the side-effects and nature of diseases caused by these elements present in the food ” it causes allergic and intolerance reactions, cancer in bladder, damage to many organs causing heart diseases, nerves system disease and cancer etc”, says Director in his elaborated report.

Court in this backdrop had directed all these three companies to show cause why besides the initial direction of depositing of Rs 10 crores each, they shall not be directed to deposit further Rs 10 crores each.

PIL on food adulteration in J&K CS, FC, Com-Sec Health, Food Safety to appear in person

SRINAGAR, Apr 28: The High Court today asked Chief Secretary, Financial Commissioner Planning, Commissioner Secretary Health and Food Safety Commissioner to appear in person on May 4 in a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) seeking implementation of Jammu and Kashmir Food Safety and Standard Act, 2006 (FSSA) to check food adulteration in the state.
As the matter came up for hearing, a division bench of the High Court comprising of Justices M.H Attar and A M Magrey asked the government to indicate as how and in which manner the food manufacturing and processing units in the state are complying with the provisions of Jammu and Kashmir Food Safety and Standard Act, 2006.
The court also asked the milk processing units in the State to submit affidavits on how much milk they supply to the markets each day with the source of their milk procurement.
Earlier, the government had filed names of Managing Directors of all food manufacturing and processing units in the state. On April 25, the High Court had said that it appears that people in Jammu and Kashmir are made to consume adulterated food and all those responsible to check adulteration seem to have forgotten to perform their statutory duty.
“There is no testing laboratory worth the name under this Act in the state of Jammu and Kashmir. It appears that people of the state are made to consume adulterated food. All those, who are responsible to check this adulteration, probably have forgotten to perform their statutory duty,” a division bench of the High Court comprising of Justices M H Attar and A M Magrey had said, while passing the orders in the matter.
The court had said: “The statement made at bar by learned counsel for the respondents and even by Commissioner Food Safety is enough to shock conscience of every sensitive soul, inasmuch as, there is no paraphernalia available in the state of Jammu and Kashmir in accordance with mandate contained in provision of Jammu and Kashmir Food Safety and Standard Act, 2006.”
The court has now asked for adequate information through a fresh compliance report with regard to details on convictions recorded by the court of law on the complaints filed under FSSA of 2006.
On April 21, the Court had asked the state government to produce full particulars of persons who have been convicted and sentenced by the court of law under the FSSA.
The court had observed that that before proceeding further in the PIL, it is deemed appropriate to seek information about the number of testing laboratories and their locations which are available in the State of Jammu and Kashmir.
The court had asked the state government to inform it about: “Number of officers/officials, who are required to be posted in terms of Food Safety and Standard Act of 2006. How many such officers are in place? Names and full particulars of all those persons, companies or corporations, which are manufacturing or processing any products in Jammu and Kashmir! How many convictions have been recorded by the court of law on the complaints filed under Food Safety and Standard Act of 2006?”
On April 12, the Court had granted a week to the state government to file objections in the PIL seeking implementation of Food Safety and Standard Act 2006 (FSSA) to check food adulteration in the state.
On March 25, 2016, the high court had taken suo-moto cognizance of media reports regarding food adulteration, rising cancers, and lack of infra structure to check adulteration of food items in the state.
In 2014, the court while hearing a PIL—Sheikh Ayoub Vs State— seeking implementation of Food Safety and Standard Act 2006 (FSSA) to check food adulteration in the state, had issued slew of directions to state authorities.
It had directed Food Safety Officers, Designated Officers and all those involved in implementation of the Food Safety Act, to “pull up their socks, hone up machinery and speed up lifting and analysis of samples and food items, transported, manufactured, stored and marketed in the state without showing any leniency to big players in the market so that food items free from adulteration are made available to consumers.”
The court had also directed the government to submit comprehensive report regarding samples lifted from time to time, indicating number of samples referred to notified Laboratories/Referral Laboratories and the result of analysis and action taken.
The court had also directed all companies to inform general public that the packed milk sold in Jammu and Kashmir is not pure cow’s milk but processed one.
“As there is a general impression that what is sold in the market by various companies is pure cow’s milk, (they) shall inform general public through print media that what is sold by them is not pure cow’s milk but processed milk,” the court had said.
The companies, court had said, shall also notify the source of milk marketed as well as mode and manner in which marketed milk is processed. However, the order was later stayed by the Supreme Court.
On March 25, 2016, the High Court had taken suo-moto cognizance of news reports on food adulteration and rising cancer incidence in the Valley.
The court appointed senior counsel Bashir Ahmad Bashir, as Amicus Curie in the case to assist it. Hearing the PIL, a division bench of Justice Muzaffar Hussain Attar and Justice Ali Muhammad Magrey issued notice to the government seeking its objections to the petition. Senior Additional Advocate General, N A Beigh, accepted notice on behalf of the government.
While treating the media reports as PIL, the division bench made certain observations, saying “Press has done its job and it is now the constitutional duty of the court to initiate action for protecting the human life.”
Underscoring its constitutional duty, the court observed: “This court being the guardian and sentinel of the rights of the people is duty-bound to respond to the alarming situation that is created by the life-threatening diseases and non-availability of infrastructure to tackle the same.”
“The causes have to be known as to why a large section of population is afflicted with the life-threatening diseases. Simultaneously, the remedial measures and necessary infrastructure have to be provided,” the court observed. “We are duty bound to enforce the fundamental rights of the large population.”
“The importance of human life is accepted and recognized by Article 21 of the Constitution of India. For leading a meaningful life, a human being has to be healthy,” the court observed, adding, “It is said that Health is Wealth. It is only a healthy person who can accomplish the purpose of life to its full.”

HC seeks compliance of Food Safety Law

Manufacturing, processing units to file affidavits on safety of their products
The Jammu and Kashmir High Court on Thursday directed owners of food manufacturing and processing units to file affidavits indicating the manner in which they follow provisions of Jammu and Kashmir Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006.
Hearing a Public Interest Litigation against food adulteration, a division bench comprising Justice MuzaffarHussain Attar and Justice Ali Muhammad Magrey also directed the owners of food processing units to file affidavits indicating that the food items they supply in the market are fit for human consumption.
While the bench directed the owners/MDs of food manufacturing and processing units to file by next date of hearing affidavits indicating as to how and in which manner they follow the provisions of the Act of 2006 and rules there under, they were also asked to provide information about the laboratories set up in their units, the equipment installed and the number of persons having expertise in accordance with the Act of 2006 working in such laboratories.
“The owners of units who deal in different kinds of milk to indicate in their affidavits as to how much milk they are supplying each day, the sources of procurement of such milk,” the court ordered.
The Court also directed owners of these units to file undertaking before its Registrar Judicial satisfying that they will supply food items fit for human consumption to consumers. “They shall also undertake that in the event it is, prima facie, found that food item are adulterated, then their units may be liable to be sealed.”
It directed the hoteliers, restaurant owners and shopkeepers to ensure that adulterated or unsafe food is not supplied to the consumers.
Meanwhile the court arrayed state government through its Chief Secretary, Commissioner Secretary, Health and Food Commissioner Food Safety, Financial Commissioner/ Commissioner Secretary Finance & Planning as party respondents in the PIL, besides owners and MDs of food manufacturing and processing units.
The court directed the Chief Secretary and the aforementioned authorities to remain present before it on next date of hearing.
Observing that the status report filed by the government attests how bad the state of affairs are, the court said the respondents in the compliance report have stated that how only two Food Testing Laboratories - one at Dalgate here and another at Patoli Jammu - are completely outdated and equipment installed in these labs is dysfunctional.
It said according to the report there are only two food analysts and at present there is only one analyst available as the other has been attached following the directions of a Budgam Court. 
Observing that the latest status report filed by respondents is sufficient to indicate that people of the state have been left at the mercy of God, the court said for the checking of adulterated food there are neither effective and adequate number of laboratories available nor the requisite equipment.
“Besides this, even the manpower, in terms of the Act 2006 and Rules made there under, in its full strength, is not available. It appears that appointments have not been made in accordance with law till date,” the court observed. 
“In the aforesaid circumstances in this case, the staying of proceedings in PIL 01/2012 by Hon'ble Supreme Court would not prevent this Court from taking up the cause of the people of the State, who are continuously made to consume the adulterated foods and some of the persons/Companies continue to manufacture/produce adulterated food items,” the court said while referring to directions in PIL of 2012.
“Staying of proceedings by the Apex Court would not mean that people would be asked to consume unsafe and adulterated food. Neither that order of the Apex Court would be deemed to have given license to such manufactures/producers of food items to process and manufacture adulterated food. The Act of 2006 is not stayed by Hon'ble the Supreme Court,” the court said.

FCO relies on ‘ill-equipped’ lab

No sample sent to accredited laboratories
While the J&K Food Control Organization has swung into action following directions of the High Court and announced a crackdown on milk adulteration, it has however once again banked on inadequately equipped Food Safety Lab here for testing samples instead of ensuring fool-proof scrutiny of samples outside the State.
As the state health machinery embarked on the ‘special drive’ to check the menace of adulteration in milk and milk products, the exercise seems to be headed nowhere. The samples lifted during the drive have been sent for testing to the Food Testing Laboratory in Srinagar, a facility with poor infrastructure and manpower. The department, as per the officials, is ‘following the rules’ in doing so.
Two days back, the High Court in a PIL on Food Safety said it was ‘shaken’ by the statement made by food commissioner that there is ‘no paraphernalia available in the state of Jammu and Kashmir in accordance with the mandate contained in provisions of Jammu and Kashmir Food Safety and Standards Act 2006.’
However, the department has put all its faith in this rickety lab and entrusted it with testing of milk samples lifted during the drive. The blatant violation of court directions as well as apathy to public health can be gauged from the fact that samples of packaged milk lifted as per directions of Judicial Magistrate Budgam were also sent to Srinagar lab for testing while bypassing the Court order which directed that Commissioner Food Safety will ensure that samples of milk and milk products, as well as other edibles are sent to ‘Referral Lab Kolkata for opinion and action as warranted under law.’
Assistant Controller JK DFCO, Irfana Ahmed said that the FSSA did not permit that food samples to be sent directly to an accredited or referral lab for testing. “We are following the statutes of FSSA 2011. It says that a sample can be sent to a lab other than the state lab only if the officer concerned is not satisfied with the test report,” she said.
Healthcare experts have expressed concern over JK DFCO resorting to what they called ‘turning a blind eye’ regarding the lack of infrastructure to check milk safety. “The officials, despite being aware of the limitations of the Srinagar Food Testing Lab, have not pre-empted that the reports will be ‘misleading’ and turned a blind eye towards the need of the hour,” said a senior specialist in GMC Srinagar.
He added, “Desperate times should have called for desperate measures but for the organization has started taking refuge in rules.”
JKDFCO said that during the three days of special drive that commenced from April 25th 2016, 105 samples of milk were lifted and sent for testing. These samples were taken from milk suppliers en-route to various urban areas. Earlier, this month, as per the court directions, 46 samples of packaged milk and milk products were sent for testing.

State has only 2 outdated food test labs, HC told


Health Dept steps in to check milk adulteration in Jammu

Sets up nakas at entry points of city to prevent supply of poor-quality milk
Jammu, April 28
As the urban local bodies across the state have failed to check milk adulteration, the Health Department has decided to launch a comprehensive campaign to check supply of poor-quality milk to the residents of the state.
The Health Department has decided to set up nakas at various places across the state to ensure that only unadulterated milk is supplied to people.
The Health Department has taken the initiative following directions of Health Minister Bali Bhagat, who has received complaints about supply of poor quality and adulterated milk across the state.
According to official sources, teams of the Drugs and Food Control Organisation (DFCO) have set up nakas on the entry point of Jammu city. Nakas have been set up at Bhagwati Nagar bridge, Canal Head, main road, Barnai, and Purmandal Morh. Not only teams of the DFCO have set up nakas at the entry points, but some teams are also conducting random checking of milk being supplied in the city.
There was a proposal to purchase mobile testing labs to check milk adulterations in the city, but due to paucity of funds the authorities could not purchase these labs. Due to the delay, there is no check on the sale of contaminated and poor quality of milk products.
As reported earlier the proposal to purchase mobile labs was mooted more than four years ago after an alarming report by the Food Safety and Standard Authority of India (FSSAI) in January 2012 that 83 per cent of milk sold in the state is not safe for consumption.
The FSSAI had taken 18 samples from different areas of the state as part of its nationwide study and had found that most common adulteration in the state is glucose and skimmed milk products (SMP), mixed with intention to earn profit at the expenses of the heath of the common man.

States can notify excise officials to act as food safety officers: FSSAI

New Delhi
The Food Safety & Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has mandated that state governments can notify excise department officer to act as food safety officer (FSO) so as to ensure quality of alcoholic drinks. This has been done after a series of discussions and deliberations that took place between food safety officials of states and FSSAI in recent times.
"The objective was to reduce the overlapping of duties in the two departments," explained Pawan Kumar Agarwal, CEO, FSSAI, adding, “The state food safety commissioners have to take a decision for the same. A letter in this regard has been written earlier in April. The aim was to bring the two departments closer to avoid overlapping of work.” However, he clarified, “But there is an embargo as it depends on the qualification of the excise inspector which should be at par with that of FSO.”
Currently, for quality purpose, the FSO under the state food safety commissioner, has the responsibility to collect samples of the liquor for the purpose of testing whereas the excise inspector has a responsibility to check the shops selling alcohol for revenue purpose. But many a times, this was seen as interference in the excise department functioning when FSO comes in to collect samples.
Agarwal comments, "The decision will give freedom to state government to notify the excise department official to work as FSO for the purpose of sample collection for quality purpose."
Meanwhile, reactions on the move seem to be positive with fewer concerns. A N Panchal, FSO, food department, Rajkot Municipal Corporation, said, "FSSAI has offered powers of a food safety officer as to avoid delay in the functioning. This is regards to speeding up the process. Food safety officer can also collect samples to ensure safety and can submit it to the lab for testing, if required."
Particularly for the purpose of import, this would be a great help he feels. "Earlier it consumed time as excise officer handed it to the concerned food safety officer to take the process ahead. But now due to the eased procedure, time consumed in the import process will be saved," he added. MPFDA officials also welcomed the move. 
Meanwhile, UPFDA officials stated that when the food safety regime moved from PFA to FSS Act, it was meant that department of food safety as a uniform body should carry out such an exercise with respect to food and beverages while earlier, there used to be different offices from municipality to state level that were involved.

Apr 28, 2016

Officials keep sharp eye on artificially ripened mangoes

Coimbatore: With the mango season arriving in the district, the food safety department has begun tightening their noose over sale of artificially ripened mangoes. While use of ethylene is allowed to ripen the mangoes, using calcium carbide to do the same is banned. 
The chemical is often used by wholesalers who want to offload large stocks before the arrival of the main season, so they capitalize on the initial demand.
The food safety department last week seized two tonnes of artificially ripened mangoes from a wholesaler in Pollachi. The seized mangoes included the popular Banganapalli and Alphonso varieties. 
"The mangoes were found to have been artificially ripened with calcium carbide which is banned according to the food safety laws," said a senior food safety officer based in Coimbatore West. "We only allow artificial ripening through ethylene," he said.
Calcium carbide stones are usually placed inside the mango boxes, because when the chemical comes into contact with any form of moisture, it produces acetylene gas which accelerates the ripening process.
"However, according to food safety laws, calcium carbide is considered a carcinogenic (cancer causing) substance, because it sometimes contains traces of arsenic" said the officer. 
"This is the reason we have installed three artificial ripening chambers, which just gas the fruits with ethylene," said C Durai, proprietor of Pazhamudhir Nilayam, in Nehru Stadium. "So we put the fruit inside it for three to five days," he said.
With a long dry spell this summer, the mango season has been described as 'average' by both wholesalers and mango growers. 
"Many flowers which turn to fruits drop during heavy dry winds that blew during the North-East monsoons," said K Manikandan, a mango grower in Pollachi.
"We have already begun receiving stock from Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Kerala, but the fruits are small and not satisfactory in size," said Durai. "So, the season will also get over fast. 
Usually Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh stock comes well after Tamil Nadu's stock arrives," he said. The prices currently hover around 100per kg for Alphonso mangoes and 70 to 75 for Banganapalli mangoes.
The prices reportedly dropped because of heavy arrivals last week, but is expected to go up over the next month as the season gets over, said sources.

KFC set to bring edible packaging in India

New Delhi: At a time when beverage giants such as Coca-Cola are planning to opt for plastic packaging (bottles), US fried chicken chain KFC is trying to go the opposite way. Starting with its Rice Bowlz, it will introduce edible packaging in the country later this week.
Previously made of plastic, the bowls that are used to serve rice and gravy will now be made of tortilla. This is the Yum Brands-owned company’s second attempt at ready-to-eat packaging after edible coffee cups in UK.
“This is an India-first innovation and may be adopted in KFC’s global markets,” said Rahul Shinde, MD of KFC India. Rice Bowlz is one of the best-sellers on KFC’s menu he-re and contributes around 5-6% to its domestic revenues while fried chicken contributes more than 50 % .
KFC will pilot the project in Bengaluru, keeping in mind the Karnataka government’s ban on plastic that was imposed last month.
Globally, food scientists have been trying to come up with edible packaging in an effort to curb waste. It is estimated that around $12 billion worth of recyclable, post-consumer packaging is wasted annually. However, edible packaging can be expensive too.
“We will not charge more for our edible bowls,” said Shinde. “We will wait for consumer response and depending on the pace of adoption, we may roll the concept out to other items on our menu.”
Shinde said the company has invested heavily in its innovation team and the edible bowl was a result of it. Other items from India that have been adopted in KFC’s global markets are KFC Chizza and KFC Krushers.
While KFC sales declined 1% year-on-year in the quarter ended March with western-style foods witnessing a slump, the QSR chain plans to foray into tier III cities in the near future to boost consumption, according to Shinde.

What does the non consumable Kashmiri roti tell about Kashmir?

Kashmir Observer’s investigation has revealed that our staple, the Kashmiri roti , is not safe for consumption. This is as alarming and dangerous as can be. The technical reasons pertain to the alarmingly high usage of baking soda in the making of the roti. Seen from this perspective, the issue is eminently amenable to resolution; the government can tighten up regulation and also take recourse to vigorous monitoring and application of the law, through fines and punishment. But the reasons for this malaise go deeper than mere technical misapplication and abuse of ingredients that go into the making of the roti.
Team KO has learnt that the high use of baking soda in rotis , while making the roti, appealing in terms of aesthetics and appeal, can cause serious ailments. Given that roti is our staple, this means that our entire population is at risk- the nature of which can mutate and morph into ugly forms-both symptomatically and in real terms. The question is why is this widespread abuse of an egregious nature taking place? Who is responsible? And can anything be done to stem the abuse?
It is easy but facile to blame only our kaandurs (bakers) for the abuse. Yes, they are the main culprits but are merely the face and symptom of the wider malaise that has gripped our society. Consider a factual. Right from the sabzee or mewa walla(vegetable or fruit vendor), to shopkeepers, to stores to midsized to large sized businesses to government, corruption has become pervasive and systemic in Kashmir. No one emerges clean from the stench of corruption. We are all, in one way or the other implicated in corruption and mal practice. The kaandur’s are no exception. The question is why?
The reasons are both social and economic and perhaps even political. Socially, the pressure to gain wealth and through wealth status and prestige makes people take recourse to get rich schemes and behaviour. This usually means unethical, immoral and even illegal behaviour and practices even at the expense of individuals and society. The kaandurs abuse of ingredients and selling non consumable roti is a case in point. Given that the quest for prestige is legitimate and money is a necessity, society has kind of given implicit legitimacy to corrupt behaviour and practices. Now readers might wonder where does politics come into the picture?
The Kashmiri collective unconscious and emotional landscape appears to be defined by uncertainty. This uncertainty feeds into the Kashmiri imagination in way wherein people live for the moment or the next day, in the negative sense of the idea. We discount the present for the sake of the immediate future sacrificing long term future in the process. As such, we live in the present in a perverse manner. In the process, we have become self absorbed , self indulgent and selfish. The frame of reference for most Kashmiris , unfortunately, because of the political uncertainty in the state, has become their very own selves. This pans out in a negative manner and includes corrupt, unethical and illegal behaviours and practices.
These are broad and generic reasons but these account for specific malpractices like the Kandur roti case in contention.
Can anything be done about it? Can the condition- especially that of the Kashmiri roti be remedied?
Maybe.
But for remedial action has to emanate from society. One immediate solution that emerges is boycott of the roti till Kaandurs are remorseful and are compelled by economic and even social reasons to drop their bad practices. This could be complemented by stricter government regulation and a decree by fiat which enjoins the bakers to follow an ethical and legal regimen in preparing the roti. Fines, penalties and punishment could be the concomitant to stricter regulations. However, as pointed out, the issue is embedded in a larger social, economic and political framework. While nothing can be realistically done about the politics of the state, the socio economic aspect can be remedied. Society as a whole must delegitimize corruption and render it taboo- all forms of corruption and economically, society must develop a sense of proportion about money – its nature and use.
In the final analysis, it is in combination where the cumulative efforts of society, individuals and government can curb menaces and bad practices that are predatory and harmful to society as a whole like the bad practices of our Kaandurs. Our society is suffering from and on a range of fronts. These threaten and pose great danger to us- individually and collectively. Let us begin the process of catharsis and let us begin with the Kaandurs and Kashmiri Tsot.

5-foods that were once considered bad for you, but are actually healthy

Nutritional guidelines and recommendations are constantly changing in the light of new research. It can be difficult to keep up with which foods are healthy and which aren’t. Here we look at five foods that have gone through the cycle of being the villains of nutritional science but are now, based on some old and some new science, apparently okay to eat again.
Eggs
For a long time, eggs were thought to be bad for your heart. A large egg contains a hefty 185mg of cholesterol. Dietary cholesterol was believed to contribute to high blood cholesterol levels. But for the last 20 years, nutrition and medical research has shown repeatedly that at normal intakes dietary cholesterol has very little influence on a person’s blood cholesterol levels.
Although it’s taken a while, nutrition experts are now correcting the record for eggs and other foods that contain cholesterol (such as chicken liver and shellfish) by removing it as a nutrient of concern from dietary guidelines. Eggs are an excellent source of protein, healthy fats, and several vitamins and minerals.
Fat spreads
Many manufacturers have removed trans fats from margarine 
The story of fat spreads, such as margarine and butter, is probably one of the most confusing stories in nutrition. The origin of margarine, which is made from vegetable fat, dates back to the mid-1800s. Since that time, margarine has replaced butter as the fat spread of choice in most developed countries. This switch was driven by the lower price of margarine compared with butter as well as recommendations from health professionals to eat less saturated fat in order to prevent coronary heart disease (CHD).
While this switch away from saturated fats began to show reduced CHD incidence in the population, researchers also identified an independent link between trans fat (a fat produced when partially hydrogenating vegetable fats to make margarines) intake and CHD. Since this link between trans fat and CHD was confirmed by multiple studies regulatory agencies around the world have sought to eliminate trans fats from the diet.
The food industry was quick to respond and has been producing trans fat-free margarine for years now. However, there is still confusion among consumers as to whether vegetable, fat-based spreads are safe to eat. The short answer is yes, as long as the food label doesn’t list “partially hydrogenated vegetable oil” as an ingredient.
Modern vegetable oil-based fat spreads are a way to replace dietary saturated fat while increasing polyunsaturated fat – a dietary change that has been shown to reduce CHD in large cohort studies.
Potatoes
Potatoes are one of the few vegetables considered to be unhealthy. Because they’re a high glycaemic index food they tend to get lumped in with foods made from refined carbohydrates as foods to avoid. But potatoes are a rich source of carbohydrates, vitamin C, some B vitamins and trace minerals.
How you prepare potatoes also changes the aspects of those starches that get a bad rap. Cooking and cooling potatoes increases the amount of resistant starch in the potatoes. This resistant starch then acts like dietary fibre which “resists” digestion in the gut, potentially having a positive impact on your gut bacteria.
Dairy
Dairy – including milk, butter, yogurt and cheese – was once considered a staple in many people’s diet, but consumption patterns have changed, in part, due to difficult-to-interpret health messages.
Positive aspects of dairy include the high protein and calcium content. Fat content and fat type are important when choosing dairy products as some contain high amounts of fat per serving and this fat tends to be high in saturated fat.
Although it’s best to avoid a diet high in saturated fat (a risk factor for CHD), regularly consuming dairy products doesn’t need to be a concern if your overall calorie intake and fat intake is healthy. Because there are numerous studies that point toward both the healthy and unhealthy aspects of dairy it is difficult to recommend specific intakes or types of dairy foods for improving health. The recent updates to the UK Eat Well Plate still promotes dairy foods as part of a healthy diet, as long as the dairy choices are lower in fat.
Raw nuts and nut butters
Nuts also get a bad reputation for being high in fat and high in calories, leading some to suggest they should be avoided by anyone looking to lose weight. But there is mounting evidence to suggest that raw nuts are key to a healthy diet and maintaining healthy body weight. A recent study, published in the British Journal of Nutrition, showed that eating raw nuts reduces death from all causes, cardiovascular diseases, coronary heart disease and sudden cardiac death.
Although studies are still ongoing to determine what components of tree nuts are promoting these positive health outcomes, we already know the nutritional benefits. Raw nuts contain protein, healthy fats (low saturated fat and high monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fat), dietary fibre and micronutrients.
Nut butters, such as peanut butter, can also be part of a healthy diet. The fat in peanut butter has a healthy profile and peanut butter is also an excellent source of protein, fibre, vitamin B6 and magnesium. Some recent evidence has shown increased weight loss for people that replace less healthy proteins, such as processed meats, with peanut butter.
Nut and nut butter consumption can be a part of a healthy diet, but you need to be mindful of the calories.
Remember, when it comes to food and health: all foods fit into a healthy diet. Don’t fall into the trap of believing in “superfoods” or “food villains”. Enthusiastic consumption of one particular “superfood” can be worse than consuming a so called “food villain”.Scott Harding, Visiting Senior Lecturer in Nutritional Sciences, King's College London This article was originally published on The Conversation.

All our food is ‘genetically-modified’ in some-way–where do you draw the line?

Everything from domesticated carrots to glow-in-the-dark tobacco fits somewhere on the spectrum. 'Banning GM' isn't a simple yes-no decision.
In the past week, you’ve probably eaten crops that wouldn’t exist in nature, or that have evolved extra genes to reach freakish sizes. You’ve probably eaten “cloned” food and you may have even eaten plants whose ancestors were once deliberately blasted with radiation. And you could have bought all this without leaving the “organic” section of your local supermarket.
Anti-GM dogma is obscuring the real debate over what level of genetic manipulation society deems acceptable. Genetically-modified food is often regarded as something you’re either for or against, with no real middle ground.
Yet it is misleading to consider GM technology a binary decision, and blanket bans like those in many European countries are only likely to further stifle debate. After all, very little of our food is truly “natural” and even the most basic crops are the result of some form of human manipulation.
Between organic foods and tobacco engineered to glow in the dark lie a broad spectrum of “modifications” worthy of consideration. All of these different technologies are sometimes lumped together under “GM”. But where would you draw the line?
1. (Un)natural selection
Think of carrots, corn or watermelons – all foods you might eat without much consideration. Yet when compared to their wild ancestors, even the “organic” varieties are almost unrecognisable.
Domestication generally involves selecting for beneficial traits, such as high yield. Over time, many generations of selection can substantially alter a plant’s genetic makeup. Man-made selection is capable of generating forms that are extremely unlikely to occur in nature.
Modern watermelons (right) look very different to their 17th-century ancestors (left). Photo: Christies/Prathyush Thomas, CC BY
2. Genome duplications
Unknowing selection by our ancestors also involved a genetic process we only discovered relatively recently. Whereas humans have half a set of chromosomes (structures that package and organise your genetic information) from each parent, some organisms can have two or more complete duplicate sets of chromosomes. This “polyploidy” is widespread in plants and often results in exaggerated traits such as fruit size, thought to be the result of multiple gene copies.
Without realising, many crops have been unintentionally bred to a higher level of ploidy (entirely naturally) as things like large fruit or vigorous growth are often desirable. Ginger and apples are triploid for example, while potatoes and cabbage are tetraploid. Some strawberry varieties are even octoploid, meaning they have eight sets of chromosomes compared to just two in humans.
3. Plant cloning
It’s a word that tends to conjure up some discomfort – no one really wants to eat “cloned” food. Yet asexual reproduction is the core strategy for many plants in nature, and farmers have utilised it for centuries to perfect their crops.
Once a plant with desirable characteristics is found – a particularly tasty and durable banana, for instance – cloning allows us to grow identical replicates. This could be entirely natural with a cutting or runner, or artificially-induced with plant hormones. Domestic bananas have long since lost the seeds that allowed their wild ancestors to reproduce – if you eat a banana today, you’re eating a clone.
 
Each banana plant is a genetic clone of a previous generation. Photo: Ian Ransley, CC BY 
4. Induced mutations
Selection – both human and natural – operates on genetic variation within a species. If a trait or characteristic never occurs, then it cannot be selected for. In order to generate greater variation for conventional breeding, scientists in the 1920s began to expose seeds to chemicals or radiation.
Unlike more modern GM technologies, this “mutational breeding” is largely untargeted and generates mutations at random. Most will be useless, but some will be desirable. More than 1,800 cultivars of crop and ornamental plants including varieties of wheat, rice, cotton and peanuts have been developed and released in more than 50 countries. Mutational breeding is credited for spurring the “green revolution” in the 20th century.
Many common foods such as red grapefruits and varieties of pasta wheat are a result of this approach and, surprisingly, these can still be sold as certified “organic”.
5. GM screening
GM technology doesn’t have to involve any direct manipulation of plants or species. It can be instead used to screen for traits such as disease susceptibility or to identify which “natural” cross is likely to produce the greatest yield or best outcome.
Genetic technology has allowed researchers to identify in advance which ash trees are likely to be susceptible to ash dieback disease, for instance. Future forests could be grown from these resistant trees. We might call this “genomics-informed” human selection.
6. Cisgenic and transgenic
This is what most people mean when they refer to genetically modified organisms – genes being artificially inserted into a different plant to improve yield, tolerance to heat or drought, to produce better drugs or even to add a vitamin. Under conventional breeding, such changes might take decades. Added genes provide a shortcut.
Cisgenic simply means the gene inserted (or moved, or duplicated) comes from the same or a very closely related species. Inserting genes from unrelated species (transgenic) is substantially more challenging – this is the only technique in our spectrum of GM technology that can produce an organism that could not occur naturally. Yet the case for it might still be compelling.
Since the 1990s several crops have been engineered with a gene from the soil bacteria Bacillus thuringiensis. This bacteria gives “Bt corn” and other engineered crops resistance to certain pests, and acts as an appealing alternative to pesticide use.
This technology remains the most controversial as there are concerns that resistance genes could “escape” and jump to other species, or be unfit for human consumption. While unlikely – many fail safe approaches are designed to prevent this – it is of course possible.
Where do you stand?
All of these methods continue to be used. Even transgenic crops are now widely cultivated around the world, and have been for more than a decade. They are closely scrutinised and rightly so, but the promise of this technology means that it surely deserves improved scientific literacy among the public if it is to reach it’s full potential.
And let’s be clear, with global population set to hit nine billion by 2050 and the increasingly greater strain on the environment, GMOs have the potential to improve health, increase yields and reduce our impact. However uncomfortable they might make us, they deserve a sensible and informed debate.James Borrell, PhD student in Conservation Genetics, Queen Mary University of London. This article first appeared on The Conversation.

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DINAMANI NEWS



FSSAI to upgrade food labs at Rs 480 cr as per surveillance-based system

New Delhi
In an exercise to revamp the food testing laboratory and sampling infrastructure in the country in tune with the new surveillance-based food safety mechanism, Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has earmarked Rs 480 crore for upgrading government-owned food testing labs. With this, the apex food regulator is aiming at having at least one state-of-the-art laboratory in every state. Large states may even have two labs. In the emerging scenario, the Ghaziabad lab may run under PPP model. 
In this regard, speaking to FnB News, Pawan Kumar Agarwal, CEO, FSSAI, stated that the apex food regulator has been working towards ensuring standard food labs across the country, which was required immediately and for the purpose, partnership with private labs was also being considered. Agarwal added that the apex food regulator would advise the state governments on the operations and maintenance of the labs. 
He explained, “We would help establishing one lab in each state and two in big states which will be duly accredited. We will provide funds for the machines and equipments, microbiological test and other operations of the labs.”
Meanwhile, as part of the earlier infrastructure, there are two Central labs in Kolkata and Ghaziabad owned by FSSAI, while state governments own some 82 labs. That apart, there are 98 private labs, which are accredited by NABL, but the state government labs are largely unrecognised. Further, there are about 12 referral labs.
Interestingly, while the private lab infrastructure is at par with Central and state government labs, there has been confusion amongst state-level FDA officials about legality of the tests to be carried out in private labs. Clearing the air, Agarwal observed, “The key staff will be provided by the government in private labs who will carry out the food analysis. At least eight government functionaries will be appointed in each lab for the purpose of testing and analysing.”
Apart from private labs, emphasis is being laid on referral labs. Recently the regulator had issued a list of referral labs for the purpose of food analysis and the zones for the said purpose. It also revised the analysis and testing charges that start at Rs 700. 
While the lab infrastructure is being revamped, FSSAI is also working on reduction of sampling done by the enforcement machinery as the surveillance-based mechanism calls for sampling based on concrete information of some wrongdoing. This move is expected to bring a shift in the current trend of 100% sampling wherein only 2 out of 10 samples fail a test but labs remain occupied in unnecessary analysis.
Meanwhile, taking a cue from the apex food regulator’s initiative of surveillance-based mechanism, Madhya Pradesh State Food and Drug Department has issued a directive for a pre-nod from the local district health officer for collection of food samples.
Joint comptroller MPSFDA Pramod Shukla stated, “It has been decided that a total of 48 samples will be taken in a year as legal samples. In a month total 12 samples will be taken wherein four will go for analysis while remaining eight will be part of the surveillance process. This would save our energy and we will be in a position to use our resources including labs in a better way.” He added that the state government had chalked out a Rs 3.92 crore plan for upgrading state-owned food labs.
Agarwal found this to be a welcome step as long as it was in accordance with the spirit of the instruction of the FSSAI. 

The fall guys

Proposal to criminalise ‘misleading’ endorsement unfairly shifts the onus from regulator to celebrity.
Is it fair to expect Madhuri Dixit, who has appeared in Maggi noodles advertisements, to pierce through the thicket of claims and counter-claims on technical aspects of food chemistry when even the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India, with an army of technicians and labs at its disposal, stumbles on this issue? Well, that’s what a parliamentary panel on the Consumer Protection Bill, 2015, would expect her to do. It has recommended that “endorsers/ celebrities” be criminally penalised for “misleading” advertisements with a Rs 10 lakh fine and/ or imprisonment of up to two years for a first offence. If things go according to the panel’s plan, the scales would be unfairly and disproportionately loaded against endorsers and the onus shifted for ascertaining product safety away from regulators.
In China, attempts to prosecute Jackie Chan for his endorsement of a “chemical-free” shampoo with allegedly cancer-causing ingredients have failed. Internationally, in the US, for example, celebrity endorsers are subject to civil liability for making false claims. But, one, such liability is typically indemnified by the brand owner and, two, a test of “reasonable contemplation” by the endorser — for instance, has the product been signed off on by the safety regulator? — is applicable. In the case of criminal liability, however, these two alleviating conditions will likely not hold. In India, where the IPC already criminalises attempts to intentionally sell “noxious” food, and the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006, has provisions for fines for false advertising, additional criminal penalties are overzealous and unnecessary.
The parliamentary panel’s recommendation is troubling, especially when applied to the realm of food safety and consumer products, where the shifting sands of science frequently throw up new heroes and villains. So is it kosher to say that eggs and butter make for a healthy breakfast? Or that Marmite is good for you thanks to its vitamin load? The UK says it is, although Denmark had banned it. You better be sure before you ad lib.

BROMATE THREAT TO DRINKING WATER

Reports of chemical contamination in packaged drinking water are cause for concern. To tackle the problem, the Government must implement an integrated plan that will improve production standards of bottled water
The deteriorating state of environment is evident by the rising levels of contamination and pollution, so much so that even packaged drinking water may not be safe for consumption. Recently, the discovery of chemical contamination in packaged drinking water has become a serious cause of concern.
A study conducted by the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre found the presence of carcinogen (causing cancer) bromate — a by-product of disinfectant — in 27 per cent of samples of packaged drinking water in Mumbai.
The discovery of this chemical compound has prompted the Bureau of Indian Standards to intervene and enforce a mandatory test for bromate in packaged water across the country.
The BARC study was conducted in the wake of an advisory issued by the World Health Organisation on the cancer causing attributes of bromate.
The BIS has now fixed the maximum permissible limit of bromate at 0.01microgram per litre. Prior to this in the interest of public health, the BIS had also made it mandatory to test packaged drinking water for other carcinogens like Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, polychlorinated biphenyl and pesticides.
However, post-production diligence and quality control may not be sufficient to control the problem of chemical contamination in packaged drinking water and it is equally important to tackle the issue of illegal water bottling units that are operating across the country.
According to estimates, more than 10,000 illegal bottled water units are operating in the national capital region alone often using the labels of 64 licensed manufacturers thereby putting the health of millions of people at risk.
These units do not have the mandatory clearances from BIS and hardly meet standards of water purification, and yet are able to thrive due to the indifferent attitude of the authorities. The larger efforts of the Government to control environmental degradation and contamination can be seriously jeopardised if illegal units are allowed to operate with impunity and adopt practices that result not only in the chemical contamination of the end product but also unsafe disposal of plastic.
The ground water used by packaged water companies in India is usually high on heavy metals and pesticide residue. Due to this, the companies resort to disinfecting processes that end up leaving behind chemical by-products. For instance, if ozone is used for disinfection in water that already contains bromine, it can lead to the formation of bromates.
Similarly, certain hypochloride salts can lead to the formation of chlorites and chlorates that are known to affect red blood cells. The pesticide contamination in bottled water too is a growing cause of concern. A study conducted by the Centre for Science and Environment showed the presence of pesticide residue in packaged water.
People tend to trust bottled drinking water unconditionally and the Government must ensure that this trust is not broken. Health hazards arising out of consumption of bottled water for which the consumer has paid cannot be acceptable.
As the country experiences drought situations in many regions and cities suffer from low quality municipal water supply, the issue of contamination of bottled water cannot be taken lightly. To tackle this situation, the Government must form a three-pronged integrated plan that not only ensures higher production standards of bottled water but also clamps down on illegal bottling units besides bringing down the toxicity levels in ground water.
The authorities must realise that chemical contamination in drinking water is an irreversible process; hence prevention of contamination is critical. As a part of the strategy to ensure clean and pure drinking water, the Government must also strengthen its research and development capabilities in the field of water treatment and purification.
This will not only enable the municipal corporations to stay a step ahead of pollution but will also compel the water bottling companies to invest in research and development to discover newer and safer methods of disinfection that do not compromise on public health or environment.
As an immediate step to control bromate contamination, the Government must ensure that all the bottling companies immediately put a stop to ozone treatment of water and adopt advanced treatment process such as ion exchange and membrane filtration.
Additionally, the Government in association with the Food Safety Standards Authority of India can make it mandatory for the bottled water manufacturers to provide information on product labels regarding the treatment process followed. This will spread awareness in general public about the threat posed by chemical contaminants in bottled water and help in maintaining much needed quality.