Jun 18, 2016

HC warns SagoServe of contempt proceedings

Chennai, Jun 18 (PTI) The Madras High Court has warned the Salem-based starch and sago manufacturers Sago Serve that it would initiate contempt proceedings if the company caused any obstruction to the officials of District Food Safety Department visiting its godowns to verify the presence of rejected sago products. Hearing a PIL by Kallakurichi Vellalapatti Vivasayigal Munnetra Sangam of Namakkal District seeking to test the rejected sago material, the first Bench comprising Chief Justice Sanjay Kishan Kaul and Justice R Mahadevan yesterday impleaded the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and the Food Safety Standards Authority of India as respondents and directed them to file counters within four weeks. "Since the matter in issue relates to the purity of an edible product which is widely available and consumed, it is necessary that the above respondents bestow urgent consideration on the matter, taking the nine test parameter, so that we have the benefit of afinal view as to what should be necessary test to be followed." When it was brought to the notice of the court that the Managing Director of Sago Serve was not giving the designated officer District Food Safety office, Salem, access to the godowns to verify where the rejected product has been stored, the bench said, "We are not able to appreciate this obstructionism and thus must put the Managing Director, Sago Serve on notice that if any obstruction to the designated officer, District Food Safety office is pointed out to us in future, we will have no option except to initiate contempt proceedings."
Directing the Designated officer, District Food Safety office, Salem to forward its views to Food Safety Standards Authority of India, New Delhi, it ordered the officer to be appear again on August 2 and posted the matter.
The matter relates to a PIL regarding addition of acid and other harmful chemicals to sago products.
The farmers association had submitted that the Tamil Nadu Tapioca Natural Sago Manufacturers Association of Salem, was purchasing tapioca from the farmers and adding acid and other chemicals in order to make it attractive. The association had already made representation in this regard to the higher authorities on November 3, 2014, but there was no response, the petitioner said.
The PIL was filed seeking for an interim direction from the Court to conduct the prescribed test by the authorities of Referral Food Laboratory, Pune.

HC warns SagoServe of contempt proceedings

The Madras High Court has warned the Salem-based starch and sago manufacturers Sago Serve that it would initiate contempt proceedings if the company caused any obstruction to the officials of District Food Safety Department visiting its godowns to verify the presence of rejected sago products.
Hearing a PIL by Kallakurichi Vellalapatti Vivasayigal Munnetra Sangam of Namakkal District seeking to test the rejected sago material, the first Bench comprising Chief Justice Sanjay Kishan Kaul and Justice R Mahadevan yesterday impleaded the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and the Food Safety Standards Authority of India as respondents and directed them to file counters within four weeks.
"Since the matter in issue relates to the purity of an edible product which is widely available and consumed, it is necessary that the above respondents bestow urgent consideration on the matter, taking the nine test parameter, so that we have the benefit of afinal view as to what should be necessary test to be followed."
When it was brought to the notice of the court that the Managing Director of Sago Serve was not giving the designated officer District Food Safety office, Salem, access to the godowns to verify where the rejected product has been stored, the bench said, "We are not able to appreciate this obstructionism and thus must put the Managing Director, Sago Serve on notice that if any obstruction to the designated officer, District Food Safety office is pointed out to us in future, we will have no option except to initiate contempt proceedings."
Directing the Designated officer, District Food Safety office, Salem to forward its views to Food Safety Standards Authority of India, New Delhi, it ordered the officer to be appear again on August 2 and posted the matter.
The matter relates to a PIL regarding addition of acid and other harmful chemicals to sago products.
The farmers' association had submitted that the Tamil Nadu Tapioca Natural Sago Manufacturers Association of Salem, was purchasing tapioca from the farmers and adding acid and other chemicals in order to make it attractive.
The association had already made representation in this regard to the higher authorities on November 3, 2014, but there was no response, the petitioner said.
The PIL was filed seeking for an interim direction from the Court to conduct the prescribed test by the authorities of Referral Food Laboratory, Pune.

Food regulator pulls up four companies for misleading ads

Three firms withdraw ads, one modifies
In an effort to check misleading advertisements, the Food Safety and Standards Authority (FSSAI) has asked four food companies to either withdraw or modify misleading advertisements.
These companies are Jivo Wellness Pvt Ltd (canola oil), K C Food Products (digestive biscuits), Phytotech Extracts Pvt Ltd (Proteqt) and Chemical Resources, Maharashtra (Furocycst).
The food regulator intervened after complaints against these companies were received on the GAMA (Grievances against Misleading Advertisements) web portal, which was launched by the Department of Consumer Affairs last year.
The Advertising Standard Council of India (ASCI), which has been appointed by the Department to process these complaints, took the matter to FSSAI after these companies failed to comply with its directions.
According to the FSSAI website, Jivo Wellness made some misleading claims about the health benefits of its canola oil product and has since withdrawn the ads.
KC Food Products (Jammu & Kashmir) had to take similar steps for its digestive biscuits product after it made claims about offering the “best digestive biscuits due to highest content of whole wheat flour than other digestive biscuits”.
Meanwhile, the FSSAI has asked Chemical Resources (Maharashtra) to modify its ads for Furocyst (for ovarian cysts) after it made claims that the drug contains US patented ingredients, had no side effects and that nearly 94 per cent of patients reported positive benefits after using it.
Phytotech Extracts was pulled up by the authority for claims made in the advertisements which promoted its product Proteqt (treating hangovers).
The company has informed FSSAI that it has stopped manufacturing and marketing this product and was not publishing any advertisement at present.
When contacted, Shweta Purandare, Secretary General, ASCI, said: “These complaints were received on the GAMA portal and the matter was escalated to FSSAI due to non-compliance.”
She said if companies do not comply with ASCI’s directions, then the complaint is escalated with the regulator concerned to take action against such offenders.
FSSAI has in the past said it will be working closely with ASCI to check on the menace of misleading ads.
The two are also said to be looking at formalising a framework to take suo motu action against food and beverage companies for misleading claims in advertisements.
Earlier this month, the FSSAI had asked its central licensing authority to send a show-cause notice to Patanjali over complaints about misleading ads of mustard oil product.

FSSAI: Only 10% Of All Imported Edible Items Needs To Be Checked

Under the new management of CEO Pawan Agarwal, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) is pushing new rules and modifying existing stringent ones. The testing of imported edible items is the new change on the agenda with FSSAI recommending testing only 10% of all imported food. The earlier rule stated that all imported edible items needs to go through checks. 
TESTING GUIDELINES
According to Hindustan Times, the FSSAI will gather a list of high and low-risk imports from the Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT) and will base its assessment on risk-based sampling. Speaking to Hindustan Times about the new change, Agarwal stated that “the risk of a food or beverage is determined by three parameters: category of the food, country from where it has been sourced and credibility of the importer and manufacturer. The list of high-risk products from the DGFT include milk and dairy products, baby food, tea and coffee and cereals. 
SKIM
SOURCE COUNTRY
Currently, FSSAI will determine checking imported items based on the list curated by the DGFT with Agarwal stating that the board will gather up its own list in coming months. The high-risk category items will be tested under FSSAA-guidelines. The most frequently tested food products, dairy items, will continue to be tested since the products are perishable. The testing of edible items will also be based on the country of origin and will be determined based on the risk score of the country. “We will take out the data on background of each country in terms of exporting high and poor quality products to India. Mostly this list would include the under-developed or lesser developed countries, ” added Agarwal. 
LOW-RISK TESTING
Testing of low-risk items such as alcohol and tobacco will be more flexible during the process as they usually are exported by reputable brands and manufacturers. Anil Kumar Bhushan noted that these new rules will help ease the mode of doing business for more international brands in India. “We welcome this move as it will increase ease of doing business. The fact that FSSAI is cognizant of the importer and the manufacturer, it is good. Alcohol is the least risky as most of it is imported from reputed brands that have honed their reputation over years, ” added Bhushan.

Together, we can ensure that food’s safe

Global watchdogs and sustained activism serve to keep producers, manufacturers and regulators on their toes
If we take a look at the history of food safety regulations in India, barring the past five years, the establishment and relevant infrastructure were more focused on prevention and detection of adulteration. As a result, the industry and testing infrastructure were well equipped to prevent adulteration. Testing facilities are now gradually upgrading to help food regulators implement and food producers comply with the Food Safety and Standards Act.
Like any new regulation, the implementation of this Act too is currently in its initial stages. Sovereign regulations have always been finetuned on the basis of learning over a period of time across the world. The size and dynamic nature of the food market in India has further impeded the implementation of new regulations. Markets that have evolved in terms of regulating food safety, have done so through seamless collaboration between industry and regulators.
A world view 
Food safety incidents that occur across the world are unconnected to the state of development of a nation, be it the salmonella outbreak in peanuts reported in the US in 2009, or the e-coli outbreak in sprout beans reported in Germany in 2011. The outbreaks are due either to issues in the supply chain — such as poor agricultural practices or processing — or due to food frauds.
The unintentional safety issues arising from the overuse of pesticides and antibiotics can be controlled by providing training and knowledge to farmers; however, the major concern is money-driven adulteration or food fraud, for example, the gutter-oil scandal in Taiwan in 2014. We also still remember the 2008 incident when China was struck by the ‘melamine in milk’ scandal that led authorities across the world to develop policies that would ensure that similar instances do not reoccur.
Today, global markets are driving some of the most evolved food regulations. They have been effectively implemented in markets where the government has empanelled international third party organisations to carry out inspections on their behalf. Corrective measures for food safety issues can be two-pronged — ensuring that the current damage is minimised and securing the future. Regulations can help secure the future. The implementation of food safety regulations is driven by improvisation, and examples from developed and developing markets stand testimony to this claim.
Food recalls
The existing damage can be minimised through product recalls. In India, recalls are limited to the automotive sector where traceability is highly evolved. To replicate a similar recall structure for food products, a key factor is for raw materials to be traceable. Traceability decentralises responsibility for the safety of a food product from the manufacturer to every participant of the value chain, from the one who farms the raw material to the one who packs the final product.
The nature of the Indian market, however, is highly complex, and although materials are sourced locally, driving traceability through the value chain is a long-drawn process. An effective way to improve traceability is to spread the infrastructure network of inspection deep into complex geographies. At some locations the government already has laboratories; the government can mandate private players to test and inspect in the remaining areas.
Every new regulation or Act goes through the journey of acceptability and adoption. Food safety regulations in India are currently in this process. This can be attributed to rising awareness among stakeholders, including consumers.
Both, food manufacturers as well as regulators have come together on many occasions to ensure the safety of the consumer. In India, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) got external agencies to carry out inspections on its behalf for the first time in 2012. This enabled the FSSAI cover more ground and, in the process, led to faster adoption of new-age testing techniques owing to the global footprint of these laboratories. Such initiatives help improve the broader food safety landscape and ensure that turnaround time for such instances to be detected are shorter. Traceability along with the right mix of lab infrastructure can help the nation react more efficiently to the issues of food safety.
Is the framework robust?
The process of upgradation of laboratories has been steady; in any case, it should not be done in a hurry. A measured approach to expansion of the food testing lab network will ensure that the existing labs do not go unmanned and deteriorate due to under-utilisation. The system is pro-active, and these efforts can be further accelerated if key s
Bread and butter issues in food safetytakeholders across the value chain partner each other the objective of improving the landscape.
Issues on the safety of food will continue cropping up for a considerable period of time. They will cover a mix of policy intervention, development of infrastructure, public-private partnerships, adequate skill development, learning from experience and an intent to improve the state of food safety.
The transfer of information across the globe has led to awareness among consumers, food businesses, as well as regulators. However, at some point, we all need to take a step back and realise that while gathering information is easier and less tedious than implementing it, the task at hand is humungous and can only be achieved through collaborative accountability. Maybe, a decade from now we will be at a much more evolved state of food safety, but it is for the industry and the regulators to relentlessly work towards making our food safe. With consumers increasingly becoming more aware and activism lying at the brink of any issue of human interest, it is now more critical than ever for policy to be stronger.

DESAM asks unhygienic hotels to shut down

IMPHAL, Jun 17: Prominent hotels in Imphal city have come under the scanner of Demo-cratic Student’s Association of Manipur (DESAM) for unhygienic practices.
The students’ body laun-ched inspection drive to check unhygienic practices at different places today around 3 pm.
After New Hind Jalpan Hotel, Paona bazar was indefinitely closed and its license seized for not following the norms on hygiene under Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006 on Jun 15, the students’ body launched another inspection drive at Dhaneswori Canteen located at Konung Mamang and People’s Canteen at MPP Shopping Complex, Imphal.
Volunteers of the students’ body, led by their health and environment secretary Sh Devdutta Sharma, checked whether the eatable items sold in these hotels are hygienic or not.
It was found that Dhane-swori Canteen at Konung Mamang did not have any food safety certificate or license issued by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI).
Moreover the kitchen and dish washing areas are all filled with filth and flies from the nearby drain which was directly linked to the toilet.
Eatables and sweets which were ready to serve to customers were found scattered on a table without properly covered. Unhygienic practices in cooking eatables were also found.
A 13 year old boy from Assam was also found employed in the hotel indicating employing underage child defying the Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act.
Devdutta said that the hotel owner of Dhaneswori Canteen should procure the requisite license and certificate to operate such hotels from the FSSAI. Further he stated that the inspection drive is to imbibe good hygienic practices, manufacturing practices and personal hygiene for personnel involved in such business.
Meanwhile, one of the most popular fast food joint of Imphal City ‘People’s Canteen’ was also inspected by the student body and faulty practices were detected.
Drinking water supplied for consumers were unhygienic according to the student body. Clothes of hotel workers and staff were also found hanging above the working areas where eatables were prepared. The dish washing area was found next to the toilet and dustbins all clubbed together on the same spot showed unhygienic conditions. Eatables were also found kept above the dustbins. The FSSAI certificate of the hotel has expired in January this year which raises serious questions as to how such prominent eating joint of the people could neglect the standard norms, stated Devdutta. Following the findings, the student body locked down the hotel for today and asked the owner to rectify their mistakes. Meanwhile, another fast food hotel near People’s Canteen was also locked down after it was found in filthy conditions. Devdutta urged the authority concerned to regularly check whether the eating joints and hotels possess necessary license and follow the Food Safety norms under FSSAI.

Inspection by food safety officers

Chandigarh: As per the order of UT Director Health & Family Welfare, a joint team of food safety officers on Friday inspected the area of Kajheri & Hallo Majra of Chandigarh, where the meat shops & the Bakery units were inspected. In total four challan were issued for not possessing valid food licence and operating in unhygienic & insanitary conditions. 
Also, five bakeries which were operating in very un-hygienic and in-sanitary conditions and were operating without having a FSSAI food licence were sealed. 
The vendors were also instructed to keep hygiene and quality standards as per Food Safety & Standards Act, 2006 in view of coming rainy season.

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DINAMALAR NEWS


உணவு அலுவலர்கள் டாஸ்மாக் பாரில் ஆய்வு

 
நாகை, ஜூன் 18:
நாகை நக ராட்சி உணவு பாது காப்பு அலு வ லர் அன் ப ழ கன் நாகை பப் ளிக் ஆபீஸ் ரோட் டில் உள்ள ரேஷன் கடை, பாப் பா சு டு காடு எதி ரில் உள்ள அரசு டாஸ் டாக் கடை மற் றும் பார் ஆகி ய வற் றில் நேற்று திடீர் ஆய்வு செய் தார். ரேஷன் கடை யில் அரிசி உள் ளிட்ட அத் தி யா வ சிய உணவு பொருட் களை மழை சாரல், ஈரம் பாதிப்பை ஏற் ப டுத்தி பூஞ்சை காளான் உற் பத் தி யாக வாய்ப்பு இருப் ப தால் உரிய பாது காப்பு நட வ டிக் கை களை மேற் கொள்ள வேண் டும் என வும், பொட் ட ல மிட்ட உணவு பொருட் க ளில் தயா ரிப்பு மற் றும் காலா வதி தேதியை கவ னித்து விற் பனை செய்ய வேண் டும் என வும் அறி வு றுத் தி னார்.
டாஸ் மாக் கடை பாரில் தயா ரிப்பு விவ ரம் இல் லாத குளிர் பானங் களை விற் பனை செய்ய கூடாது. உணவு தயா ரிப் ப வர் தன் சுத் தம் பேண வேண் டும். தயா ரிக் கப் பட்ட உணவை தூசி, ஈக் கள் மொய்க் காத வகை யில் மூடி பாது காப் பாக விற் பனை செய்ய வேண் டும் என அறி வு றுத் தி னார். உணவு பாது காப்பு அலு வ லர் கள் ஆண் டனி பிரபு, சதீஸ், மகா ரா ஜன் ஆகி யோர் உட னி ருந் த னர்.