Sep 20, 2016

FSSAI on front foot to tackle food safety officer scarcity







Nearly 50 percent of the states are understaffed and the food samples that are collected annually for analysis are also well below estimates reports Shweta Kothari of CNBC-TV18.
There is an acute shortage of food safety officers in the country which has prompted the national food regulator FSSAI to send a call to various states in the country. 
Nearly 50 percent of the states are understaffed and the food samples that are collected annually for analysis are also well below estimates reports Shweta Kothari of CNBC-TV18.
The food regulator has told CNBC-TV18 that it is in discussion with states to fill these vacant posts and did say that the inspections are below optimum level currently in the country.

Weight loss food also to be checked

Food given to patients in slimming and weight loss centres will be checked and certified by FSSAI.
Hyderabad: Food given to patients in slimming and weight loss centres will be checked and certified by the Food Safety and Standard Authority of India as it wants to regulate these health foods and check their impact on patients. According to draft regulations by FSSAI, foods will have to be labeled and verified for their health efficacy on those who are prescribed these products.
A senior food inspector in the city said, “These foods are now being brought under the ambit of the food department as it is important to standardize and regulate the industry. There are too many combinations of weight loss foods which are being prescribed in the market. But what is the efficacy of these products? These tests have to be conducted from time to time and for that reason an exercise in regulation is being carried out.”
The draft proposals have been sent to all the units and a proper scientific method will be followed in classifying the foods so that people are aware of what they are consuming. At present, grievances are directly being registered with food inspectors in the municipal limits or with drug inspectors. But this exercise will also work towards creating a redressal system to tackle these issues.

Unauthorised hostels crop up in Kozhikode

Women’s Commission seeks urgent report from civic bodies on the increase in number
KOZHIKODE: The Kerala Women’s Commission has directed the local bodies in the district to submit a report on the number of authorised and unauthorised hostels functioning in the district immediately. The commission has also sought a report on the alleged spurt in the number of illegal facilities. The move comes after several complaints by inmates about the lack of facilities and security provided. Commission member Noorbina Rasheed forwarded a circular to the local body authorities seeking a detailed report.
Although only 24 hostels have been registered in the District at Corporation and municipality levels, more than 100 other illegal hostels are functioning here. Several people have also started accommodating students and working persons in their homes as paying guests but have not offered adequate facilities. According to the Commission, women from economically weak families, who sought accommodation at such hostels, were given poor facilities. Based on the complaints, the Commission pointed out that the problems were unhygienic conditions, poor water and power supply and ill-treatment of the inmates by hostel owners.
“We understand that even authorised hostels, mainly run by educational institutions, function without a licence from the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) and accommodate students in inhuman conditions”. “We are paying nearly `4,000 to `5,000 per month, but we are not satisfied with the facilities offered”, said Anila Mathew, an inmate of a city hostel here, which claims to be authorised. In spite of the hostel being located in the heart of the city, there is no security which has often led to drunkards entering the hostel.
Adding to these woes, 10 women were accommodated in a room but a single bathroom was allocated for two rooms, she added. Police officials here also said that these illegal hostels were allowing people from other states without certificates to prove identify or a school card. “We have also got information that youngsters who escape from juvenile homes take sanctuary in these illegal hostels and get involved in various crimes, said Vinod P, city police official here.

Under the first phase of project clean street food FSSAI has trained more than 20,000 street food vendors in food safety and hygiene


Food vendors should use clean utensils for preparing food. This is the first & most important step, to ensure that the purity of food is maintained.


Preservatives may increase the life span of food, but need to be used cautiously!


Colouring and other additives can have a negative impact on consumers if not put within a permissible amount. Presentation is important for vendors but not at the cost of the health of consumers!


Your kitchen should always be clean before you begin cooking. An unclean kitchen is a hub of bacteria & microorganisms, which can settle on your food & make it unfit for consumption



Illegal shops, abattoirs mushrooming in city, says audit report

Illegal shops and slaughter houses are proliferating in the city.
From five-star hotels to super markets, food malls and bakeries, a large number of commercial establishments are operating in the city without obtaining the statutory licence to Dangerous and Offensive Trades and, Factories from the civic administrators. A report of the Local Fund Audit wing of the State government shows a list of 43 such units. This includes two luxury hotels on Willingdon Island and Fort Kochi and a supermarket in Ernakulam North.
The auditors have pulled up the officials for not responding to three consecutive notes regarding the illegal functioning of the shops in the city, the report said.
The civic authority also failed to ensure that the shops that had obtained the licences earlier renewed them on time. It was the responsibility of the officials of the Health Wing of the local body to ensure that the shops are functioning after obtaining the mandatory licence. “The local body has sustained huge revenue loss on this account,” the auditors said.
Illegal slaughtering
The auditors have put on record the thriving illegal slaughtering of animals for meat in the city. The Kerala Municipalities Act has banned the slaughtering of animals outside the licensed abattoirs.
The abattoir of the Kochi Corporation, which was functioning at Kaloor, had not obtained the licence from the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India, it was reported.

Keep an extra vigil on sensitive food junctions: CFS


In this regard, the enforcement staffs of District Food Safety Offices of South Andaman and North and Middle Andaman conducted surprise raids on the Food Business Operators involved in manufacture and sale of prepared foods at Jirkatang, Middle Strait of South Andaman jurisdiction and Oralkatcha at Baratang of North and Middle Andaman jurisdiction on 16.09.2016. During the raids 25 Food Business Operators was served with Compounding Notices for violation of different sections under Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006 and 11 Food Business Operators is being served with Improvement Notices. Further realization of fine imposed on the Food Business Operators is under process.
The Commissioner Food Safety has further warned the Food Business Operators of all food junctions in A&N Islands to maintain strict personal hygiene, cleanliness and also to wear proper dress code during the process of manufacture and sale of prepared foods. Any laxity will be viewed seriously and action under the relevant sections of Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006 will be initiated against the errant Food Business Operators.

AMSU bans Coke products

Following failure of the dealers of soft drinks to clarify the issue of tampering the manufacturing dates, AMSU has today declared that products manufactured by Coca Cola will be banned indefinitely with immediate effect.
Speaking to reporters at AMSU, Hqs located at DM College campus, AMSU secretary general Sanjit Sarangthem said that three dealers namely SK Enterprises, SB Enterprises and BS Enterprises were summoned to clarify the matter on or before September 15. Except for BS Enterprises, both SK Enterprises and SB Enterprises failed to turn up.
Therefore, it has been understood that these local dealers had been conspiring with non-local representatives of Coca Cola company to dupe the innocent public of Manipur, he said.
The State Government, which should have taken the matter seriously, is still silent on the issue, Sanjit Sarangthem added.
“Considering the health hazards these products can cause, AMSU will no longer allow any company affiliated to Coca Cola and agents to distribute or sell soft drinks manufactured by Coca Cola in Manipur till justified action is initiated under the Consumers Protection Act 1986 and Food Safety and Standards Act 2006,” he said.

Indian entrepreneur sells ‘untouchable’ foods to challenge caste bias

A former rebel fighter and member of India's "untouchable" caste is taking on caste-based discrimination with packaged foods that would have been regarded as impure just decades ago.

India banned caste-based discrimination in 1955, but centuries-old attitudes persist, and lower-caste groups including Dalits are among the most marginalised communities. 
A former rebel fighter and member of India’s “untouchable” caste is taking on caste-based discrimination with packaged foods that would have been regarded as impure just decades ago.
Chandra Bhan Prasad, 58, was born into the Dalit Pasi community of pig rearers in northern India, considered untouchable in the ancient Hindu social hierarchy. Prasad and his wife recently launched ‘Dalit Foods’ online to sell spices, pickles and grains.
“I was born impure. But I have the right to sell pure,” Prasad said by phone from his office in New Delhi.
“I grew up with segregation and untouchability, but India has changed. I want to see how those who are born pure respond to my offering,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
India banned caste-based discrimination in 1955, but centuries-old attitudes persist, and lower-caste groups including Dalits are among the most marginalised communities.
Dalits were barred from public places including temples and water tanks frequented by higher-caste Hindus. Many higher-caste Hindus considered food cooked or served by Dalits to be impure.
It is this custom that Prasad is taking aim at.
Dalit Foods sells a small range of spices and grains, including chilli powder, turmeric powder, mango pickle, barley flour and lentils. More products will be added, Prasad said.
For three years, Prasad was a fighter with India’s Maoist insurgency that claims to fight for the rights of poor farmers and landless indigenous people. He became a Dalit campaigner and a champion of economic empowerment to end caste bias.
He became interested in food after three members of his family died of cancer.
“Food adulteration is a big problem, and is probably the biggest reason for our health problems today,” he said.
“And yet, I saw 80-year-old Dalits who were healthy and doing hard labour, largely because of what they were eating: pure, unprocessed food,” he said.
“SUPERFOODS”
The domestic packaged food market is forecast to be worth $50 billion by 2017 from about $32 billion last year, according to the Associated Chamber of Commerce and Industry of India.
Recent food-safety scares have led to greater awareness of adulteration.
While growing up, Prasad said he and others in his community were forced to eat coarse foods that were reserved for cattle and for servants. These included unpolished rice and millets.
“Millets were considered inferior food then. Today, they are called a superfood,” he said.
“We want to make Dalit foods like these popular,” he said.
A large hotel chain is buying Dalit Foods on a trial basis, and the number of customers – largely urban Indians – is rising, Prasad said.
Dalits are still often the targets of violence, with tens of thousands of crimes reported each year.
Last month, thousands of Dalits in Gujarat state pledged to boycott the dirty jobs traditionally thrust upon them in protest against the lynching of Dalit men by upper-caste Hindus.
“We have made a lot of progress, but Dalits are still not equal to the upper caste,” Prasad said.
“My business is a social experiment to see if India has really transformed, to see if people are willing to overcome their biases and customs for food that is pure,” he said.