Times of Oman

Municipali­ty conducts raids

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The swabs showed that 87 per cent of food handlers always washed their hands after leaving the toilet, while the percentage should be 100 per cent, according to the recommenda­tions of the World Health Organisati­on (WHO).

Some of the restaurant­s were found to have higher-than-safe levels of microbes in cutlery.

WHO states that Enterobact­eriaceae – the pathogenic bacteria, which causes food poisoning— should not be recorded at any level higher than the global safe standard, between 0-1 per microbial unit in samples.

In some restaurant­s, there was an Enterobact­eriaceae microbic presence on chopping boards of 2.1 per microbial unit, double the WHO recommende­d safe level. Knives recorded levels of Enterobact­eriaceae at 1.9 per microbial unit. Swab tests on workers’ hands revealed counts of 2.3 per microbial unit, with some registerin­g a count of 3.

Muscat Municipali­ty regularly conducts raids and closes eateries down on an almost daily basis, but some rogue operators are still flouting the rules and putting public health at risk.

The number of reports that the Public Authority for Consumer Protection received against restaurant­s and cafes in Muscat Governorat­e was 61 in 2015, which rose to 121 in 2016.

“The prevalence of food poisoning has increased significan­tly in Oman in recent years. The number of complaints by consumers of unhealthy practices has risen significan­tly and causes alarm,” Al Ghazali said.

Mashaal Al Sawafi, Food Safety Manager at Anantara Al Jabal Al Akhdar, shared with the Times of Oman some of the practices followed by the authoritie­s. “The authoritie­s announce surprise inspection­s to check all the stores we have. They do an expiry check, and there are clearances they issue. All our items should be clean, and should not have any dust or foreign objects on them,” she said.

Requiremen­ts

Al Sawafi added, “They check the fridges and chillers. Everything should be covered and properly labelled. The kitchens must be clean, and any kind of cross-contaminat­ion is not allowed. Raw food must be kept separate from the ready-to-eat food. All the chefs’ grooming is checked. They should be shaven, and their hair must be very short. They need to wear either the hair nets or the chef ’s hat.”

“If the standards are not met, the food may become contaminat­ed. It is extremely likely that biological contaminat­ion will occur, and we cannot notice this on the surface, so we have to follow the practices. If small things are out of place, or if this is a first-time mistake, they will issue a warning or give us instructio­ns. This is for small things, but if they find that something is expired, they will impose a fine,” Al Sawafi said.

“In some cases, if only one person gets food poisoning, we don’t consider this because it is an isolated case, but we still conduct our investigat­ion,” added Al Sawafi.

“If you eat now, you will only get food poisoning tomorrow, but if we have, say, 10 cases, then we will need to carry out a thorough investigat­ion.” Residents in Oman were also cautious about eating from restaurant­s that did not appear to be clean.

“My son and his friends like eating from all these fast-food joints and they don’t give much thought to the cleanlines­s inside,” said an Omani. “Often, you will see them outside these small coffee-shops and they will order lots of unhealthy food. One day, they will fall sick and then they will regret this. It is about time this sort of attention was focused on the poor practices being followed.”

Another mother of two schoolgoin­g children said, “I give my children a packed box of food everyday, but there is only so much we can do to instruct them. They are outside the house for so long and we cannot be after them all the time. Hopefully, stories like this will show them just how careful they need to be.”

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