The Free Press Journal

STRINGENT CONSUMER PROTECTION LAW SOON

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The Union government is preparing to bring a more stringent consumer protection law that has provisions to safeguard consumers’ interests against misleading advertisem­ents among other things, Union Consumer Affairs Minister Ram Vilas Paswan said on Friday.

The current Consumer Protection Act was enforced in 1986, and over the years with changing technology, market landscape and consumer aspiration­s the law has lost its effectiven­ess, reports IANS.

The Narendra Modi government had introduced a new consumer protection Bill in the Lok Sabha in August 2015 but it was referred to a Standing Committee after discussion.

Responding to the issue of misleading advertisem­ents and adulterati­on in edibles raised by the members in the Rajya Sabha, Paswan told the House that the government has reworked the Bill keeping in mind “all the suggestion­s and reports of the Standing Committee” and the Cabinet has also cleared the new draft last week.

“Now the new Bill has been cleared by the Cabinet and we will introduce it very soon in the Lok Sabha, and subsequent­ly in the Rajya Sabha. We have put in great effort in preparing this Bill, it will address issues of misleading advertisem­ents such as those claiming to regrow hair or lose weight etc in these many days et al, among other things,” Paswan said.

Earlier, Chairman M. Venkaiah Naidu related a personal experience of how he was once duped by an unscrupulo­us advertiser that sold medicine to lose weight. On complaint to the Ministry, it was found that the advertiser was based in the US.

The Consumer Protection Bill, 2015 was found to have many lacunae such as it empowered the central government to supervise the functionin­g of, and issue binding directions to the district, state and national consumer redressal commission­s. This may affect the independen­ce of these quasi-judicial bodies, many felt.

Also, in order to claim product liability, a claimant was required to establish four kinds of defects in the product, the injury caused from it, and that it belonged to the manufactur­er. The claimant must also establish that the manufactur­er had knowledge of such a defect.

THE CONSUMER Protection Bill, 2015 was found to have many lacunae such as it empowered the central government to supervise the functionin­g of, and issue binding directions to the district, state and national consumer redressal commission­s.

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