Khaleej Times

Nestle moves court over Maggi ban

Seeks judicial review of govt ban order against Maggi noodles

-

Mumbai — Nestle said on Thursday it is challengin­g a ban imposed by India on its hugely popular Maggi instant noodles brand after tests showed they contained excessive levels of lead.

Nestle said it had approached the high court in the western city of Mumbai seeking a judicial review of a June 5 order from the government’s food safety regulator banning the product.

“Nestle India Limited has today approached the Hon’ble Bombay High Court raising issues of interpreta­tion of the Food Safety and Standards Act 2011,” said a statement posted on the company’s website.

It said it was also challengin­g a separate order from the state government of Maharashtr­a, of which Mumbai is the capital.

Nestle, which says the noodles are safe to eat, had already announced it was pulling the product from sale when the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) imposed a national ban following similar moves by some state government­s.

On Thursday the company said it would keep the product off store shelves despite the court action.

The FSSAI said last week it was banning the company from producing and selling the noodles after tests by some states had found lead levels above statutory limits.

It concluded the noodles were “unsafe and hazardous for human consumptio­n”. The safety scare is a huge blow to the company, which has been selling its Maggi brand for over three decades in India, and has 80 percent of the country’s instant noodle market.

Shares in Nestle India, a subsidiary of the Swiss-based giant, fell more than 9.0 per cent on the Bombay Stock Exchange last week as the controvers­y escalated.

The company’s global chief executive Paul Bulcke flew to India last week to try to reassure consumers over the safety scare, telling a press conference on Friday that the noo- dles were “safe for consumptio­n”.

But the move failed to convince India’s government, which on Monday said it would seek damages from Nestle for false advertisin­g.

Maggi noodles — marketed as a quick and healthy snack — grew increasing­ly popular as more and more Indians moved away from their homes to study or seek work.

It emerged as one of India’s five most trusted brands in a consumer survey conducted last year.

Several celebritie­s have endorsed Maggi over the years, including Bollywood superstar Amitabh Bachchan. Nestle, which markets a huge range of food items from Nescafe instant coffee to KitKat bars, said last week that Maggi noodles would return to the market “as soon as the current situation is clarified”.

The court will hear submission­s from both sides on June 18, according to a listing on its website. —

 ??  ??
 ?? AFP file ?? A shopkeeper taking packets of Nestle Maggi instant noodles from the shelves of his shop in Siliguri. —
AFP file A shopkeeper taking packets of Nestle Maggi instant noodles from the shelves of his shop in Siliguri. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates