SRINAGAR, Sept 10: Chief Secretary, Atal Dulloo today chaired a high-level review meeting to assess the functioning of the Food Safety Wing of the Drug & Food Control Organization (DFCO) in the wake of recent seizures of rotten meat in various parts of the J&K.
The meeting was attended by Commissioner Secretary, FCS&CA; Secretary, H&ME; Commissioner, Food & Drug Administration (FDA); Commissioner, JMC/SMC; Director, FCS&CA, Kashmir; Director Health, Jammu/Kashmir besides other concerned officers.
Underscoring the critical importance of public health, the Chief Secretary stressed on strengthening the enforcement machinery coupled with effective surveillance and strict regulatory controls to guarantee safe and hygienic food supply across the UT.
He directed for intensification of inspections across all food businesses, particularly high-risk Food Business Operators (FBOs), and called for stricter deterrents against violators.
Highlighting the limitations of mere penalties, the Chief Secretary instructed that convictions, licence suspensions, and criminal proceedings be pursued vigorously to curb malpractices.
He further directed formulation of a robust enforcement action plan to ensure comprehensive implementation of the Food Safety & Standards Act.
During the meeting, Secretary, Health & Medical Education, Dr. Syed Abid Rashid Shah outlined the mandate of the Drug & Food Control Organisation under the Food Safety & Standards Act, which includes regulating manufacture, storage, sale, and distribution of food through surveillance, enforcement sampling, licensing/registration of FBOs, inspections, awareness campaigns, prosecutions, and issuance of prohibition orders wherever required.
Commissioner, FDA, Smita Sethi presented the performance highlights of the Organisation. She informed that during the current financial year, the Department carried out 9,294 inspections, including 1,145 risk-based inspections, and lifted 2,477 legal samples, out of which 210 samples failed quality tests. Fines amounting to Rs85.80 lakh have been realized from offenders.
She further revealed that under special enforcement drives, the Department conducted 1,081 inspections of meat and meat products, seizing 2,057 kgs and destroying 11,034 kgs of substandard meat, leading to 9 licence suspensions and 34 cases recommended for prosecution. In Jammu division, 45,462 kgs of milk and milk-based products (paneer, sweets, etc.) were also seized
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