United colas of India

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| What is worse, and this applies not just to soft drinks but to all foodstuffs, is that Parliament has just passed the Food Safety and Standards Bill, which further dilutes any action that can possibly be contemplated against companies whose products violate health standards, as and when they are fixed. The food safety legislation does this through a curious overlapping of definitions of "residues", "contaminants", "extraneous matter", and "sub-standard food". So, if there is something in the food/drink that is potentially unsafe, like the pesticide residues that the CSE's tests say were found in the cold drinks they tested, what will decide the action to be taken is whether the pesticide residue is a "contaminant", whether it is "extraneous", or "sub-standard". If it is "extraneous", the Section that describes "extraneous" says the food is not unsafe to consume; yet the definition of "unsafe" food describes this as food that contains "extraneous" matter! |
| The Bill is so full of such contradictions that it makes it near-impossible to ever take action against a company whose products are found to be unsafe/unhealthy. So, even if the BIS does notify the standards that the CSE alleges it has not done owing to political pressure, the food companies will always be able to argue their way around the problem by using the contradictory definitions in the food safety legislation. What is even more galling is that the same food companies immediately withdraw batches of water/drinks in other countries when the authorities there suspect a problem ""in India, the presence of such reports doesn't spur the industry to do anything except increase its spending on film stars who rubbish test reports. |
First Published: Aug 04 2006 | 12:00 AM IST