The Hindu Steps will be taken to
protect the interests of arecanut growers, K. Jayaprakash Hegde, Congress MP,
has said.
The Union government has not banned
arecanut, Congress MP K. Jayaprakash Hegde said here on Sunday. Steps would be
taken to protect the interests of growers, he said.
At an interaction programme
organised by the Malenadu Mithra Vrinda here, Mr. Hegde said Union Minister for
Health and Family Welfare Ghulam Nabi Azad had informed him that there was no
proposal before his Ministry to ban arecanut. “Under no circumstance the Centre
will ban arecanut,” he said.
Lakhs of families in the Malnad and
coastal districts of the State depend on the crop for their livelihood.
Mr. Hegde, who represents the
Udupi-Chikmagalur constituency, said all reports in India indicated absence of
carcinogens in arecanut. The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC)
of the World Health Organization in a 2008 monograph had stated that “arecanut
is carcinogenic to humans.” There is “sufficient evidence” of the
carcinogenicity of betel quid (paan) with and without tobacco, the WHO had
said.
On September 6, 2013, Amal Pusp,
Director, Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, wrote a letter to the
Food Safety and Standards Authority of India to examine the scientific
evidences on the harmful effects of arecanut with a view to initiate action to
classify the nut as an injurious substance and accordingly prohibit its use as
ingredient in any food product, in conformity with the objectives of the Food
Safety and Standards Act, 2006.
Mr. Hegde said he would hold a
meeting with Food Safety and Standards Authority of India Director Sandhya
Kabra on the issue. Arecanut as such was not harmful. Products mixed with
arecanut would be harmful to health, he said. Mr. Hegde said Additional
Solicitor-General Indira Jaising made a forceful submission in the Supreme
Court against manufacture and sale of ghutka products. The apex court had not
banned arecanut or its cultivation. The Cancer Biology Laboratory, Jawaharlal
Nehru University, Delhi, has clarified in its report that arecanut does not
cause cancer, he added.
State subject
Senior Congress leader B.L. Shankar
said agriculture was a State subject and the Centre had no power to ban
arecanut cultivation. Referring to comments made by participants on the
editorial titled ‘Paan Singh Tumour’ published in The Hindu on July 26,
2012, Mr. Shankar said it was the opinion of the newspaper.
T.N. Prakash, professor, University
of Agricultural Sciences, Bangalore, said, “Arecanut is a food item. It is
nutritious. I have no objections in banning products mixed with arecanut such
as paan masala.” Janata Dal (Secular) MLA Y.S.V. Datta said he would oppose any
proposal to ban arecanut.
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