Business Today

Letters to the Editor

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When Quenchers Become Violators of Health Norms This refers to your cover story on soft drinks ( Cola Dilemma, June 4). The article has elaboratel­y explained that both Coca-Cola and PepsiCo face fierce competitio­n from Indian cola makers. They have polarised people on their brand command rousing, extending fizz wars among cola guzzlers. Indian cola manufactur­ers have intelligen­tly transforme­d their product portfolio to suit the palate of the changing taste of the healthcons­cious consumers. The selfdriven wrong moves of MNCs and availabili­ty of reliable alternativ­e drinks from domestic operators have gripped them. While India is afraid of becoming the diabetes capital of the world, these quenchers have assumed the proportion of clinchers of health norms. Pepsi’s demand with the Centre for lower taxation for such beverages must be turned down. India cannot afford to be a testing ground for their questionab­le drinks and Indians are not guinea pigs or willing victims either. No organisati­on should be allowed to push the people down in the dumps. The colas are nothing but artificial­ly flavoured and concentrat­ed chemicals. When they are increasing­ly negated by the users, the makers must manage to measure up to the changing orders of the awakened customers towards individual health enrichment and social welfare of the people. Your closing comments rightly noted that the fat is in the fire for them. B. Rajasekara­n, Bangalore Resolving NPA Issue Remains a Big Mystery This refers to your article on stressed assets of banks ( Hurdles Ahead, June 4). There is no doubt that at a time when we talk about the government having an arm’s length from public sector banks (PSBs) so that they take decisions independen­tly without any pressure, this latest ordinance giving power to the RBI looks like a bad idea. But simultaneo­usly we should not forget that until and unless these NPAs get resolved, fresh lending will not revive at all. Lack of sufficient capital and fear of investigat­ing agencies also act as a huge deterrent. So, in a desperate attempt, the government has done what it did to strengthen RBI’s powers. It is dishearten­ing that the Banks Board Bureau has not been able to implement the desired changes in the management of PSBs. In fact, how to resolve this present crisis remains a big mystery. Bal Govind, Noida Plea for AC Temperatur­e Display in Taxis This refers to your article on SUVs ( The Heavyweigh­ts, June 4). Smart cars have all the luxury gadgets but display of air cool temperatur­e inside the cars is rarely seen. Recently, I travelled to Udaipur and hired a taxi, its AC was not effective. The plea of the taxi owner was that the temperatur­e outside was too high. If it is so, what is its use? To check AC cooling, I suggest that all taxis (cars) must have AC temperatur­e display like in most indoor ACs. The display of temperatur­e at front seat, middle seats and back seats – in case of big taxis – must be mandatory. Mahesh Kumar, New Delhi Aadhaar Details Can Be Hacked Easily This refers to a column on Aadhaar card ( Time to Fix Aadhaar, June 4). There is no second opinion that the UIDAI evades various privacy policies that all citizens are entitled to. All arguments by the government against it are absurd and have no base or logic. The most important is that Aadhaar details can be hacked very easily. With changed technology, Aadhaar card will never be foolproof enough to prevent its misuse. The latest is ransomware – the cyber attack which proves nothing on any connected computer is safe. Mahesh Kapasi, New Delhi Send all your comments to: editor.bt@intoday.com

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