Mint Hyderabad

How safe is the food on your child’s plate?

Prominent brands are under the scanner for selling sugary infant food, chicken fed with antibiotic­s, and spices peppered with cancer-causing chemicals. Naturally, experts are concerned about lax regulation­s. Mint reviews the safety and quality of our pack

- BY SAYANTAN BERA Election Bites

Why are some big brands in the news?

Last week, Swiss watchdog Public Eye said Nestle adds excess sugar to its infant milk and cereal products sold in low- and middleinco­me countries, including India, but not in developed markets. Nestle said that over the years, it has cut ‘added sugar’ in products sold in India. In another instance, four spice mixes sold by MDH and Everest were red-flagged by regulators in Hong Kong and Singapore, due to presence of ethylene oxide—a carcinogen­ic food fumigant. Finally, Venky’s, a poultry brand, was found pushing antibiotic­s to enhance poultry production, which causes drug resistance in humans.

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What do health experts have to say?

Food companies often mislabel packaged food, so consumers think they are healthy. Tags like ‘natural,’ ‘healthy’ and ‘pure’ are used to drive sales. Buyers may think fruit juices are healthier than carbonated beverages, but they often have same or even higher levels of sugar. Deceptive marketing adds to India’s growing burden of diabetes and child obesity.

According to Nutrition Advocacy in Public Interest (NAPi), a think tank, India needs strict regulation­s to control marketing of junk food to children, easy-to-understand labels on packaged food and ban celebrity endorsemen­t of ultraproce­ssed food like biscuits and cereal-based ‘health drinks.’ FSSAI is yet to mandate front-of-pack labels which alert buyers on high levels of salt, sugar and fat. Energydens­e ultra processed food is designed to be addictive, which pushes people to eat more and gain weight, studies show.

The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) is probing two cases—infant products and spices. It is collecting samples from manufactur­ing units across India which will be tested by labs. For infant products, FSSAI will test multiple brands to check if they violate local laws. Earlier in April, the commerce and industry ministry advised e-commerce firms to remove the ‘health drinks’ tag from popular products, citing lack of standards and definition under domestic food laws. In April last year, a controvers­y erupted after Bournvita, a drink marketed to children, was found to contain excess sugar.

What does this mean for consumers? 5 What steps did the regulator take? What about nonpackage­d food?

Same story. Exports of premium rice from India have come under the scanner in Europe for high pesticide residues. Consumers in India are not aware of chemical residues in grains and pulses they eat daily—because most products go untested and escape scrutiny. The problem is particular­ly severe for perishable produce like green chili, brinjal, okra and out-ofseason vegetables where farmers tend to use chemical pesticides indiscrimi­nately. It is safer to switch to certified organic food, now available at reasonable prices.

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For more election-based charts and historical analysis, visit the infographi­cs section on the Mint app. Source: Election Commission of India
Data: Shuja Asrar Design: Sarvesh Kumar Sharma For more election-based charts and historical analysis, visit the infographi­cs section on the Mint app. Source: Election Commission of India
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