Indian Express: Tirupati: Wednesday, September 20, 2017.
The Tirumala
Tirupati Devasthanams (TTD) obtained a food safety licence like any other Food
Business Operator (FBO) for the famed Tirupati laddu.The TTD applied for food
safety licence in May and in August it got licence from FSSAI with an annual
fee of Rs 7,500.Bengaluru-based activist T Narasimha Murthy filed a petition to
the chairperson of the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) in
Delhi demanding that the TTD should either acquire the necessary licence to
operate as a food business or the temple will have to mend its way of
operation.
About a year
and a half ago, Murthy filed an RTI to inquire whether TTD was operating with a
food safety licence. Subsequently, reminders were sent to the TTD by the FSSAI even
as recently as June this year asking them to comply with the norms laid down by
the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006. In his petition, Murthy claimed that
unsafe and unhygienic methods were being used while making laddus.
In September
last year, the then TTD EO D Sambasiva Rao had written back to the FSSAI
stating that the laddus that were being distributed among pilgrims cannot be
termed as food. “Prasadams of respective Hindu temples will be prepared as per
the respective traditional customs, but shall not be intervened under the
pretext of FSSAI or CST Acts that demean the religious feelings of crores of
Hindu pilgrims,” the executive officer had said back then.
Another rule
that they were flouting was the yearly inspection of the kitchens by FSSAI
officials, which TTD claimed they cannot allow as the ‘potu’ is an auspicious
place where outsiders cannot enter.
In October
last year, the FSSAI had retorted to this ‘laddu not food’ claim, by saying,
“Food means any substance whether processed, partially processed or
unprocessed, intended for human consumption except categories like drugs,
cosmetics or psychotropic substances. Speaking to Express, the temple priests
and employees said, “The temple management takes immediate steps by conducting
inquiries and seeking reports from all departments concerned whenever any
anomaly occurs. There is no need for any inspection by government
institutions.”