Dec 5, 2014

பரமத்திவேலூர் அருகே கலப்பட வெல்லம் தயாரித்த 2 ஆலைகளுக்கு சீல் சர்க்கரை, வெல்லம் பறிமுதல்


பரமத்திவேலூர், டிச.5:
பரமத்திவேலூர் அருகே கலப்பட வெல்லம் தயாரித்த 2 ஆலைகளுக்கு உணவு பாதுகாப்பு அதிகாரிகள் சீல் வைத்தனர்.
நாமக்கல் மாவட்டம் பரமத்திவேலூர் அடுத்த பிலிக்கல்பாளையத்தில் வாரத்தில் இருமுறை வெல்லச்சந்தை கூடும். இங்கு சுற்றுவட்டார கரும்பு விவசாயிகள், வெல்லத்தை கொண்ட வந்து ஏலம் விடுவது வழக்கம். இந்நிலையில் வெல்லம் தயாரிக்கும் போது, அதில் சாக்கரை, ரசாயனம் கலக்க கூடாது எனவும், மீறினால் கடும் நடவடிக்கை பாயும் எனவும் உணவு பாதுகாப்பு மாவட்ட நியமன அதிகாரி தமிழ்ச்செல்வன் எச்சரிக்கை விடுத்திருந்தார். இது குறித்து, விவசாயிகள் பங்கேற்ற ஆலோசனை கூட்டமும் கடந்த மாதம் நடத்தப் பட்டது.
இந்நிலையில் பிலிக்கல்பாளையம் அடுத்த சின்னாகவுண்டம்பாளையத்தில் உள்ள ஆலை ஒன்றில், உணவு பாதுகாப்பு மாவட்ட நியமன அதிகாரி தமிழ்ச் செல்வன், உணவு பாதுகாப்பு அதிகாரிகள் சிவநேசன், இளங்கோ, சிவசண்முகம் மற்றும் குழுவினர் நேற்று திடீர் சோதனை நடத்தினர்.
இதில், 25 மூட்டை, சர்க்கரை, ரசாயனம் கலந்து வெல்லம் தயாரித்திருப்பது கண்டுபிடிக்கப்பட்டது. இதையடுத்து, 25 மூட்டை வெல்லம், 12 மூட்டை அஸ்கா சர்க்கரை, தராசு உள்ளிட்டவற்றை அதிகாரிகள் குழுவினர் கைப்பற்றினர். மேலும், அந்த ஆலைக்கு சீல் வைக்கப்பட்டது.
மேலும், அதே பகுதியில் உள்ள மற்றொரு கரும்பாலையில் நடந்த சோதனையில் சர்க்கரை, ரசாயனம் கலந்து வெல்லம் தயாரித்திருப்பது கண்டுபிடிக்கப்பட்டது.
இதில் 45 கிலோ கலப்பட வெல்லத்தை பறிமுதல் செய்தனர். மேலும், ஆலைக்கு சீல் வைக்கப்பட்டது. விதிகளை மீறி கலப்பட முறையில் வெல்லம் தயாரித்த இரண்டு கரும்பா லைகள் குறித்தும் முழு விசாரணை நடத்தப்படும் என்று அதிகாரிகள் தெரிவித்துள்ளனர்.

KFC, Sagar Ratna rice unsafe, HC told

Two popular restaurant chains, KFC and Sagar Ratna, are serving rice dishes that have been found to be “unsafe” due to the presence of harmful artificial colouring, the Delhi government’s food safety department has said in a report submitted to the high court.
The “unsafe” dishes mentioned are fast-food giant KFC’s Rizo Rice served at its restaurant at Scindia House in Connaught Place, and some rice recipes from South Indian favourite Sagar Ratna’s outlet in Guru Teg Bahadur Nagar. Both chains operate scores of restaurants across the Capital.
Random samples were taken from the two restaurants and tested between January 2013 and October 2014. “Legal action has been initiated against them by the department,” the report said.
The report also said action has been initiated against a third restaurant, Bikanerwala, after “one sample of fruit and vegetable chutney was found to be sub-standard”.
Both KFC and Sagar Ratna denied the allegations.
“We only use natural colour (beta carotene) sourced from highly reputed international suppliers in our Rizo Rice meals. The recent rice sample collected by FSSAI (Food Safety and Standards Authority of India) has also been analysed at an NABL-accredited independent lab at the same time and it confirms that tartrazine or any other synthetic colour is not present in the product. We are confident of our product quality and are working closely with the regulatory authorities,” said a KFC statement released to HT.
Similarly, Sagar Ratna CEO Murali Krishna Parna said, “Sagar Ratna has had a lineage of providing great quality food and good service in a clean ambience to a large customer base, several of whom have been our loyal customers for years. We are aware of this visit to our outlet by FSSAI officials in February 2013. We have been very cooperative throughout the entire inspection. The sample picked up by FSSAI was primarily the raw uncooked rice. We source this rice from various known brands of rice producers. The raw uncooked rice is first washed and cleaned thoroughly, boiled properly and then only is it cooked according to different recipes and served to customers. This is a standard and stringent procedure adopted at all our outlets. The matter is currently sub-judice.” Attempts to elicit a response from Bikanervala went unanswered.
In March, the high court had observed that some fruits and vegetables sold in the Capital were “unfit for human consumption”, basing its remark on an expert committee report that said 5.3% of vegetables and 0.5% of fruits had pesticide traces above the maximum residue limit. The report claimed pesticides such as chlordane, endrin, heptachlor, ethyl and parathion — that can cause neurological problems, kidney damage, cancer and other diseases — were being liberally used in growing a number of vegetables.
As part of its safety drive, the Delhi government department also tested 648 samples of fruits and vegetables sold in the city’s markets. Two fruit samples (mosambi or sweet lime and pear) and one vegetable sample (beans) showed residues of a pesticide, fenthion, that were above the permissible limit prescribed in the FSS (Contaminants, Toxin and Residue) Regulation, 2011, the report said. It went on to say that a number of ghee samples collected and tested over the past two years from various outlets “were of sub-standard quality and ‘misbranded’ to mislead the public”. Of the tomato ketchup samples examined, one sample of vegetable sauce was “unsafe” and another “misbranded”.
HT had reported Monday that reports of alarming levels of pesticide residue in farm produce has prompted the Centre to work on a “grow safe food campaign” that could entail policy initiatives on pesticide use.

Dish samples of two restaurants found unsafe

The presence of artificial colour in ‘Rizo rice’ from KFC and another rice dish from Sagar Ratna restaurant rendered them unfit for human consumption
Samples of rice dishes collected by the Delhi Government’s Department of Food Safety from two popular eateries in the Capital have been found to be unsafe. The presence of artificial colour rendered the dishes unfit for human consumption, according to the department.
An affidavit filed on behalf of the department in the Delhi High Court on Wednesday said a sample of ‘Rizo rice’ from KFC restaurant at Scindia House in Connaught Place was collected for testing and another rice dish from Sagar Ratna restaurant in Guru Teg Bahadur Nagar.
The affidavit, filed in response to a public interest writ petition seeking ban on the sale of fruits, vegetables and food items with artificial colours, said action had been initiated against the offenders.
Among the samples of ghee collected from different outlets, many were found to be of sub-standard quality and were “misbranded” to mislead the public. The samples of fruit chutney picked up from the market also showed addition of artificial colours.
The affidavit said a total of 1,420 samples of different edible items were taken since the Court issued the directions on March 5 this year. Five of them showed the presence of pesticide residues above the prescribed tolerance limit.

Rice dish samples from two Delhi eateries found unsafe

New Delhi, Dec 4 (IANS) The Delhi High Court has been informed by the city government's food safety department that samples of rice dishes collected by it from two popular eateries here have been found to be unsafe.
In an affidavit filed by the department, it said that the presence of artificial colour rendered the dishes "unsafe" for human consumption.
Samples taken from KFC's restaurant at Scindia House in Connaught Place of its "Rizo Rice" showed it to be unsafe due to the presence of artificial colour, the affidavit said.
Rice samples collected for testing from Sagar Ratna restaurant in Guru Teg Bahadur Nagar also were found to be unsafe.
The response of the government came on a petition seeking ban on the sale of fruits, vegetables and food items with artificial colours and pesticides.
The affidavit said legal action has been initiated against the offenders.
It also said samples of ghee collected from various eateries were found to be of "sub-standard" quality and were "misbranded" to mislead the public.
Samples of fruit and vegetable chutney picked up from the Bikanerwala restaurant at the ITL Tower in Netaji Subhash Place also showed addition of artificial colours.
After the high court's direction, the department has been regularly inspecting fruits and vegetables in markets here to detect colours and pesticide residue in them.
A total of 1,420 samples of various edible items were taken since the court issued the direction March 5. Five of them showed the presence of pesticide residue above the prescribed tolerance limit.
The court had acted suo motu on a report by NGO Consumer Voice, which in 2010 found that 35 varieties of vegetables and fruits, picked from Delhi markets and tested for pesticide content, had toxins beyond permissible limits.

Soon an Indian standard for enzyme Diastase in honey

PUNE: Indian honey is soon likely to get a domestic standard for Diastase, an enzyme that is considered good for diabetes patients as well as for carbohydrate digestion. However, exporters say Indian standards are more urgently needed to regulate the antibiotics in honey.
Pune-based Central Honey Bee Research and Training Institute (CHBRTI) is working on a two-year project to come out with Indian standard for diastase in Indian honey. "According to the European standard, 8N should be the diastase content in honey. So far, we have noticed that Indian honey has diastase between 3 and 50," said CHBRTI's deputy director Daisy Thomas.
Exporters are, however, demanding domestic standards that will be on a par with the global norms.
"Our honey already has higher diastase than required by the global community," said an exporter, who did not wish to be named. "So having standards for diastase will not make much difference to Indian honey exports." Sardar Jagjit Singh Kapoor, chairman and managing director of Kashir Apiaries, India's leading honey exporter said, "We are not able to grow our exports as good quality honey is not available in sufficient quantity. We need standards to improve quality of our honey."
Similarly, another prominent exporter, Prakash Kejriwal, managing director of Kejriwal Bee Care said, "We want the FSSAI (Food Safety and Standards Authority of India) to notify the standards for Indian honey." Another exporter claimed on condition of anonymity that Indian honey is not good for health. "There is no agency to monitor the antibiotics in Indian honey. There should be no sugar in honey. But Indian honey has up to 40% sugar due to added sugar and rice syrup, which is available at 35 per kg," the exporter said.