Jan 22, 2016

No justification for lifting ban on khesari dal

The desperation is clearly visible. Unable to rein the prices of common man’s dal, the mere idea of allowing the cultivation of toxic khesari dal shows policy makers at a loss.
In a grim famine-like situation I would have still accepted it. But to use the high prevailing prices of pulses as a justification for lifting the ban of the harmful khesari dal hardly makes any sense, both scientifically as well as economically.
Khesari dal was banned in 1961. The ban was imposed after reports of spread of a disease lathyrism, a neurological disorder from eating khesari dal (botanical name: Lathyrus sativus) that leads to limping, was widely reported and diagnosed. According to New Scientist (Aug 23, 1984) — “the disease has two forms: latent and established. The latent form is characterised by mild back pain, an alteration in gait and difficulty in running. In just over half the cases, the disease goes no further. But in its established form, lathyrism leads to spastic paraplegia of the lower limbs; the fortunate sufferers can hobble on crutches; for others leg muscles give way completely and patients are reduced to crawling helplessly.”
Despite the ban, khesari dal is still grown in parts of Madhya Pradesh, Chhatisgarh, Odisha, West Bengal and eastern Uttar Pradesh. It certainly has some positive traits — it is a drought resistant crop, very hardy, and has a shorter growing period.
Since it is cultivated in Bangladesh, reports of the dal being smuggled by traders have also appeared from time to time. Even local traders are known to mix it with arhar to make a fast buck. So when scientists at the Kanpur-based Indian Institute of Pulses Research claim they have developed three varieties – mahateora, rattan and prateek – which do not carry the water soluble, non-protein amino acid ODOP toxin, I wonder how will they ensure that these three varieties are not adulterated with the traditional legume grains that carry the toxin. Since it is practically impossible to ensure, why then willingly get into a problem we know we have no control over.
There are several studies showing detoxification of ODOP by certain processing techniques like roasting, soaking prior to boiling, treatment with tamarind water etc. Some studies indicate that frying in oil removes 72-100 per cent of ODOP. Still, I don’t think it will be advisable to promote khesari dal in the common man’s menu assuming that he/she would take the necessary precautions. It is therefore very important to know how and on what basis the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) has accorded approval to the three varieties. After all, any discerning consumer would like to know the details so as to be convinced. Similarly, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) also need to hold rigorous trials and that too in public domain before any definite conclusion is arrived at.
There seems to be no justification in pushing for the revival of toxic khesari dal’s production in the garb of boosting domestic pulses production. In any case, even if the commercial trials for khesari dal are approved, it will be before several years before its production can make a significant addition to India’s production of pulses. This risk is certainly therefore not worth the effort. Instead of diverting attention to khesari dal, which has historically been found to be toxic for human health, the entire thrust should focus on increasing domestic production of pulses.
Boosting domestic production of pulses needs a two-pronged strategy. First, it is important to raise the import duties so as to stop the cheaper imports coming in. At the same time, I see no reason why India should not refrain from importing yellow peas, which is traditionally used as cattle feed in Canada, and selling it as an alternative to arhar. Putting a stop to imports must be accompanied by announcing a procurement policy that assures farmers that every grain of legume produced will be purchased by the government agencies. A high minimum support price (MSP) along with the promise of an assured procurement is the only mechanism to boost domestic production.
The government’s move to procure only 40,000 tonnes of pulses for the proposed buffer it intends to create is a flawed approach. Building up a buffer on assured procurement and leaving the rest of the farming communities to be exploited by the private trade is no incentive for production growth. Such a policy may enable the government to meet any eventuality arising from rising prices, but is fraught with dangers. Unless the availability of pulses in the market increases, and that it possible only if the total production goes up, the buffer will not be of any help in bringing down the prices.

Hotel Ashoka’s licence suspended for 3 days

Nagpur: Food and Drug administration has suspended licence of Hotel Ashoka for three days starting from February 6 to 8 on charges of uncleanliness found in various parts of the establishment during inspection and violation of Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006.
During suspension period, licence holder of restaurant cannot produce, store, sale and distribute any food items. Further action under Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006 will be taken if violations are found in further period, the assistant commissioner (food) of Food and Drug administration department N R Wakode has stated in notice issued to the restaurant.
Food and Drug administration department took this action following complaint lodged by president of Anti-Adulteration Consumer Society Mohammad Shahed Shareef.
Following complaint of uncleanliness, food safety officer A D Raut had inspected restaurant on September 18, 2015. Shortcomings in 15 to 16 cases like filth in water tank, storage of raw material, vegetarian and non-vegetarian items together in deep freezer and others.
The rectification notice was sent to restaurant on September 21.
Review inspection was done on December 1, 2015. During this inspection, shortcoming found in earlier inspection were again found. Show cause notice was issued to the restaurant on December 3, 2015. In view of public health, the department took decision to suspend licence of the restaurant for three days.

Expiry dates on food items must

The government’s move to ensure that packaged food items display information about their expiry dates, and not labels like “Best Before’’, “Best if Used by’’, “Use by’’ or ‘’Sell by’’ is welcome, because it will remove a lot of confusion or misunderstanding about their use from the consumers’ minds. A large number of food items are sold with these labels and their meaning is not clear. Minister for Consumer Affairs Ram Vilas Paswan has said that the label “Best Before’’ would be replaced by expiry dates. The National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission had pointed out that these labels are confusing and demanded that the Food Safety and Standards Authority (FSSAI) should examine the issues connected with labelling. Most manufacturers of food items do not give an expiry date but give a date before which they claim the items are best used. This is misleading.
These labels may at best be indicative of the qualities of a food item, like freshness, taste, consistency or nutritive value, but they do not indicate safety. They may give the impression that they can be used after the “Best by’’ date. But they do not say for how long they can be used after the given date. The manufacturer may actually be avoiding the responsibility for safety by not giving a clear date of expiry. It is also not known how these “Best by’’ dates are decided. It seems the manufacturers decide these dates themselves on the basis of criteria which others are not privy to. Manufacturers of the same items with the same date of manufacture may give different “Best by’’ dates. The prescription may be valid only if the food item is kept unopened or in climatic, temperature or other conditions assumed by the manufacturer. Many people get the impression that it is not bad to use an item after the date, though they may not get the best quality. On the other hand, if the item does not become unsafe or does not lose much value, throwing it away may amount to wastage.
It is best to avoid this confusion and prescribe an expiry date on the packets. But how would the expiry dates be decided for different kinds of food items manufactured in different ways? Can the decision be left to the
manufacturers, and what will be the role of the FSSAI, which is unable to discharge even its present responsibilities. A clear statement of the expiry date is needed to ensure safety and to give confidence to the consumer.

Rice, wheat to be fortified with iron, vitamins

FSAAI has approved norms for fortification for wheat flour, while it is in the process of doing so for rice
The government on Thursday announced that rice and wheat supplied from the central pool stocks might be fortified with iron and vitamins to reduce malnutrition.
The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSAAI) has already approved norms for fortification for wheat flour, while it is in the process of doing so for rice, food minister Ram Vilas Paswan told reporters here on Thursday.
However, the proposed fortification plan is still a concept, which is being discussed at a committee of secretaries, sources said. There is plan to distribute fortified wheat in place of wheat if there was consumer demand, the sources said.
While the government plans to get the atta fortified by the millers, the fortification of rice will be done by FCI when paddy is milled, they said.
The government is yet to analyse the cost for fortification of 61 million tonnes of rice and wheat, which is the estimated annual requirement.

Avoid packaging of food items in newspapers

SRINAGAR, : Additional Commissioner, food safety Srinagar in a communiqué has advised people to avoid the packaging of food articles particularly hot fried items in newspapers because newspaper ink may contaminate food articles resulting into serious health complications. As in Food Safety and Standards Act 2006, the use of synthetic Food Colours is restricted to certain beverages and bakery items. Strict action under relevant provisions of Food Safety & Standards Act 2006 shall be initiated against violators.

வேலூர் மாநகராட்சியில்தான் இந்த அவலம் சுகாதாரமற்ற முறையில் விற்பனை செய்யப்படும் தின்பண்டங்கள் கண்டுகொள்ளாத அதிகாரிகள்

வேலூர், ஜன.22:
வேலூர் மாந க ராட்சி பகு த தி க ளில் சுகா தா ர மற்ற முறை யில் விற் ப னை யா கும் தின் பண் டங் கள் குறித்து அதி கா ரி கள் கண் டு கொள் வ தில்லை என்ற குற் றச் சாட்டு எழுந் துள் ளது.
வேலூர் மாந க ராட் சி யில் வேலூர் புதிய பஸ் நி லை யம், பழைய பஸ் நி லை யம் மற் றும் சாலை யோர பகு தி க ளில் சிக் கன் பக் கோடா, முட்டை சேமியா, போண்டா, பானி பூரி, பேரீச் சம், பப் பாளி, தர் பூ சணி, அன் னா சி ப ழம் போன்ற உணவு பண் டங் கள் சாலை யோ ரங் க ளில் விற் பனை செய் யப் ப டு கி றது. இந்த பொருட் கள் அனைத் தும் சுகா தா ர மற்ற முறை யில் திறந் த நி லை யில் விற் பனை செய் யப் ப டு கி றது. இதில் சிக் கன் பக் கோடா கடை க ளில் தர மற்ற எண் ணெய் களை பயன் ப டுத் து வ தா க வும், முந் தை ய நாள் விற் ப னை யா காத இறைச் சியை குளிர் சா தன பெட் டி யில் வைத்து அடுத்த நாள் பொரித்து விற் பனை செய் வ தா க வும் புகார் எழுந் துள் ளது.
இப் படி விற் பனை செய் யப் ப டும் பொருட் க ளால் ஏற் ப டும் விளை வு களை அறி யாத பாமர மக் கள் அதனை வாங்கி உண்டு பல் வேறு நோய் க ளுக்கு ஆளா கின் ற னர்.
இதனை ஆய்வு செய் ய வேண் டிய சுகா தா ரத் துறை அதி கா ரி க ளும் கண் டு கொள் வதே இல்ைல என்ற குற் றச் சாட்டு எழுந் துள் ளது.
எனவே சாலை யோ ரக் க டை க ளில் சுகா தா ர மற்ற முறை யில் உணவு பொருட் கள் விற் பனை செய் யப் ப டு வதை தடுத்து பெரிய கடை க ளில் விலை அதி க மாக விற் கும் கடை கள் மீது அதி கா ரி கள் உட னடி நட வ டிக்கை எடுக்க வேண் டும் என் பதே பொது மக் க ளின் கோரிக் கை யாக உள் ளது.