Jun 13, 2014

Beware! Those juicy mangoes are toxic

Think twice before savouring the mangoes being sold in markets across New Delhi. If consumed, these mangoes, many of which are ripened artificially with harmful chemicals, can affect the neurological system and result in headache, dizziness, sleep disorder and other mental problems.
For the past few weeks, markets are full of mangoes and one can get the fruit at every nook and corner of residential colonies. A visit to the Azadpur fruit market revealed that the mandi is flooded with varieties of mangoes that are artificially ripened. According to traders, more than four lakh kilograms of mangoes reach the markets daily and around three lakh kg are sold in Delhi alone.
It may be difficult to resist the temptation, but experts warn that people should be careful about eating them. A. K. Singh, Head of the Division of Fruits and Horticultural Technology at the Indian Agricultural Research Institute, said these mangoes are "premature" and are usually ripened with the help of calcium carbide. "These mangoes are plucked before reaching physiological maturity just for the purpose of profit-making. As it is premature, it can't ripen naturally. The natural method is simply letting the fruit ripen by itself. Fruits produce ethylene, which hastens ripening. But the mangoes being sold now can't produce ethylene and vendors use the chemical to ripen it," Singh said.
Although mango dealers agree with this fact, they try to give their side of the story. "Mangoes are arriving from Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu. Farmers at those places pluck them prematurely because in that condition, they are more resistant to damage during handling, transport and storage before reaching the areas where they are sold. Otherwise, it will result in huge losses. Ripe fruits are soft and prone to damage," a mango dealer said.
A visit to the Azadpur market on Saturday revealed the real picture. Thousands of cartons of mangoes from the two states were ready for sale. All these mangoes were green and hard. Some people were found selling what they described as "masala" wrapped in small packets. They said the "masala" costs Rs.2 or Rs.3 a sachet. It was revealed that mango traders buy this "masala" to ripen the mangoes.


At some distance, some persons were found packing mangoes in cartons and one sachet of "masala" was placed over every layer. "This is the only way to ripen the mangoes. People would not buy them if they are green. It will take not more than a day for them to become ripe, turn yellow and be ready for eating," a trader said.
Another trader said the merchants would incur heavy losses if they did not usecalcium carbide. When asked about the possibility of authorities cracking down on the use of chemicals, a trader responded: "Nothing happens. Local officials are aware of this. This has been going on for years." Laws exist to prevent such practices, but experts say that there is lack of enforcement in the city. "Use of carbide is already banned by the government under rules to prevent food adulteration, but authorities are hardly enforcing them. Due to a lacklustre approach, middle men are easily making money out of this," Singh said.

Lab testing of potatoes, green chillies before export mandatory: APEDA

Due to the ban imposed by Saudi Arabia on Indian green chillies and Russia’s displeasure about contaminated potatoes from India, the Agricultural and Processed Food Export Development Authority (APEDA) imposed mandatory laboratory testing of exporting items. 
With effect from May 30, 2014, Saudi Arabia had banned the import of green chillies from India due to the presence of a higher-than-permissible level ofpesticide residues. In the past, there have been several reported instances of contaminated green chilli consignments in Saudi Arabia. 
APEDA had issued several advisories to the exporters of green chillies urging them to get their consignments tested from APEDA-approved laboratories and export only the compliant material. The exporters did not take serious cognisance of these advisories, and that resulted in a ban. 
The agriculture ministry directed APEDA not to issue any phytosanitary certificates to consignments containing chillies to the Middle-East or potatoes to Russia without submitting a certificate by a lab approved by the authority. APEDA doubled the sampling intensity for potatoes to Russia. 
A recent communication by the Federal Services for Veterinary and PhytosanitarySurveillance (FSVPS) of the Russian Federation informed that 23 consignments of Indian potatoes have been intercepted with pests and diseases. It demanded that stringent action be taken. 
V K Kaul, deputy general manager, APEDA, said, “In a serious tone, the Russian government informed us to take immediate measures to stop phytosanitary violations in exporting potatoes, as they found many consignments contaminated.” 
“The investigations are still going on. The contamination was identified as brownrot agent (Ralstonia solanacearum), which poses a potential threat for Russia. APEDA is strict to its quality methods and advised exporters to follow all quality measures,” he added. 
“As per the directions of the agricultural ministry, APEDA would produce a phyto-sanitary certificate only after lab testings. The quality testing of exporting potatoes to Russia in APEDA-approved laboratories are now mandatory,” Kaul added.
The document released by FSVPS stated that the violations of phytosanitary requirements during the potato exportation from India and Bangladesh to Russia have become systematic. It added that since the beginning of 2014, Brown Rot agent, which is exotic for the Russian territory, had been detected in 24 potato consignments from these countries. 
“Such violations of the international and Russian plant quarantine legislation are the reason to impose temporary restrictions on import of high-phytosanitary risk products from the violating countries,” it added.
“However, realising the necessity to maintain and develop trade relations, the Rosselkhoznadzor sent official letters to Indian and Bangladeshi national plant protection organisations with a request to investigate the violations immediately and take urgent measures,” the document said.
Currently, Ralstonia solanacearum was included in the list of quarantineable objects in Russia. In case this agent is spread in the Russian territory, it may cause economic losses of about 700-760 thousand rubles a year, based on an estimate.
T Sudhakar, deputy general manager, APEDA, said “Misunderstanding in the use of pesticide residues by farmers lead to the recent ban on Indian green chillies by Saudi Arabia. Farmers use different kinds of chemicals and pesticides to protect their crops and for good harvest.” 
“But using of these chemicals are depended on many factors, including the soil, the climate, the place and even the variety of chillies produced. Using pesticides just before the harvest would be dangerous, and mostly affects the exporting consignments,” he added. 
“Every pesticide has a prescribed level of use. Farmers should not use pesticides, if it is labelled unfit for chillies or vegetables. The quantity of pesticides can also affect the quality of products. Careless use of chemicals would affect the trade of agricultural products with foreign countries,” Sudhakar said.

After EU ban on mangoes, Iran cuts basmati import

CHANDIGARH: Close on the heels of a ban on mangoes from India by the European Union(EU), Iran has cut down its purchase of basmati rice by around half over the past three months. And yet, even farmers in Punjab and Haryana - the country's biggest producers of the aromatic crop - are planning to bring more area under basmati this kharif season.
About of 80% of basmati rice exported by India is bought by millers from Punjab and Haryana. Last year, Punjab had about 5.59 lakh hectares (ha) of area under basmati and had an output of 14.87 lakh tonnes while in Haryana the area under the crop was 7.21 lakh ha and production was 18.90 lakh tonnes.
Iran, which is the biggest importer of basmati rice from India, has cited stringent standards on chemical contamination, mainly arsenic, and dissatisfaction with the quality of commodity being delivered for lowered buying. While experts and officials fear this could hurt prices of the new crop as its transplantation begins in the first fortnight of July, exporters have allayed such fears.
Amit Marwaha, a leading rice exporter from Amritsar, said Iran had changed its food safetynorms therefore it sent back some consignments of basmati rice from India. "I don't think this will impact rice exports to Iran and other countries since most of us have applied for hazard analysis and critical control points (HACCP) 
certification, which states that all food safety standards are met by the millers."
The Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority (APEDA) data shows that India exported 35 lakh tonnes of basmati rice worth Rs 19,409 crore in the crop year 2012-13. Of this, Iran accounted for about 10.82 lakh tonnes valued at Rs 6,463 crore. From April 2013 to February 2014, basmati rice export stood at 34.38 lakh tonnes worth Rs 26,519 crore, riding mainly on strong demand from Iran, Saudi Arabia and Iraq.
Former president of the All India Rice Exporters Association (AIREA), Vijay Setia, said demand from overseas wouldn't suffer much in the coming season since most of the exporters had started maintaining the required international standards for metal residue in rice. "All concerns about quality of rice have been addressed so I see no negative impact on the export from India this year as well," said the Karnal-based exporter.

FDA police officials seize banned gutka, arrest 3 in Thane

In a joint operation, officials of the Food and Drugs Association (FDA) and the Thane District Rural police, today raided a premises in Nalla Sopara in the western part of the district, seized banned gutka and arrested three people in connection to the crime, FDA officials said.
PM Raut, Joint Commissioner FDA, Thane told UNI that officials raided Abdul Chawl, in Suresh Budhaji Jadhav Nagar at Dhaniv of Nalla Sopara and seized banned gutka of various brands including Pukar Gutka, Scented Tobacco, Gutka (Loose), and Tobacco flavour used for making gutka.
The team of officials also seized a Gutka packing machine and packing material from the premises.
Three people were arrested in connection with the raid. They were caught red handedwhile in packing operations, the FDA officials said.
Offences have been registered against the trio under sections 272, 273, 179, 188, 328, 420 and 34 of the IPC and also under relevant sections of the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) with the Valiv Police station under Vasai division, the officials added.

Chewing tobacco seized

Police seized 126 packets of chewing tobacco from two shops near Kalady here on Thursday. About 106 packets were seized from a shop run by Shamir, 35, of Pallikkavala junction.
Another 16 packets were seized from the store of Unnikrishnan, 55, at Nayarpeedika junction, on the same day.
Police arrested both store owners and registered cases against them.

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கம்பத்தில் ரூ.50 ஆயிரம் மதிப்புள்ள போதை பாக்குகள் பறிமுதல்


கம்பம், ஜூன் 12:
கம்பத்தில் ரூ.50 ஆயிரம் மதிப்புள்ள போதை பாக்குகள் பறிமுதல் செய்யப்பட்டு தீ வைத்து அழிக்கப்பட்டது.
தேனி மாவட்ட கலெக்டர் பழனிசாமி, மாவட்ட வருவாய் அலுவலர் சோமசுந்தரம் உத்தரவின்படி கம்பம் பகுதியில் நேற்று சோதனை நடத்தப்பட்டது. இதில் உணவு பாதுகாப்பு நியமன அலுவலர் டாக்டர் மீனாட்சி சுந்தரம் தலைமையில் உணவு பாதுகாப்பு அதிகாரிகள் ஜனகர் ஜோதிநாதன், மதன் மற்றும் நகராட்சி சுகாதார ஆய்வாளர்கள் ரவிச்சந்திரன், சரவணன், ராதாகிருஷ்ணன் உள்ளிட்டோர் இடம்பெற்றனர்.
கம்பம் மெயின்ரோடு, சிக்னல், பஸ் ஸ்டாண்ட் உள்ளிட்ட பகுதிகளில் திடீர் ஆய்வை மேற்கொண்டனர். இதில் தடை செய்யப்பட்ட சுமார் ரூ.50 ஆயிரம் மதிப்புள்ள போதை பாக்குகள் மற்றும் பிளாஸ்டிக் கப்புகள், பைகள் ஆகியவற்றை பறிமுதல் செய்தனர். மேலும் தடை செய்யப்பட்ட பிளாஸ்டிக் பொருட்கள் மற்றும் பாக்குகள் விற்பனை செய்ததாக ரூ.2200 அபராதம் விதிக்கப்பட்டது. இதில் போதை பாக்குகள் நகராட்சி குப்பை கிடங்கிற்கு கொண்டு செல்லப்பட்டு தீ வைத்து அழிக்கப்பட்டது.

பெரம்பலுர் அருகே ரூ.1 லட்சம் மதிப்பு கலப்பட டீத்துள் பறிமுதல்

பாடாலூர், ஜூன்12:
பெரம்பலுர் அருகே 200 கிலோ சாயம் கலந்த தேயி லைத் தூளை உணவு பாதுகாப்புத் துறையினர் பறி முதல் செய்தனர்.
பெரம்பலூர் மாவட்டத்தில் பல்வேறு பகுதிகளிலும் உள்ள டீக்கடைகளில் உணவு பாதுகாப்புத் துறையினர் ஆய்வு செய்தனர். அப்போது கடைகளில் சாயம் கலந்த தேயி லைத் தூள் பயன்படுத்தப்படுவது கண்டறியப்பட்டது. இது குறித்து டீக்கடைக்காரர்களிடம் விசா ரணை நடத்தியபோது பாடாலூரில் இருந்து சிலர் கொண்டு வந்து விற்பனை செய்து வருவது தெரிய வந்தது.இதையடுத்து நேற்று உணவு பாதுகாப்புத்துறை நியமன அலுவ லர் புஷ் பராஜ் தலைமை யில் அலுவலர்கள் ரவி, அழகுவேல், அன்பழகன், சின்னமுத்து ஆகியோர் கொண்ட குழு வினர் ஆய்வு மேற்கொண்டனர்.அப்போது பாடா லூர் பகு தியில் உள்ள இரண்டு வீடு களில் இருந்து 200 கிலோ சாயம் கலந்த தேயிலைத் தூள் பறிமுதல் செய்யப்பட்டது. இவற்றின் மதிப்பு ரூ.1 லட்சம். இந்த தேயிலைத்தூளின் மாதிரி உண வுப் பகுப்பாய்வு பரிசோதனை க்கு அனுப்பப்பட் டது.
பரிசோதனை அறிக்கை வந்தபன் உரிய நடவடிக்கை மேற்கொள்ளப்படும் என உணவு பாதுகாப்புத்துறை நியமன அலுவ லர் புஷ்பராஜ் தெரிவித் தார்.