Fortified rice: Surveyors find that consumers fear traces of 'plastic rice'

Some beneficiaries complain of abdominal discomfort, gastritis, diarrhoea and nausea after eating fortified rice

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RICE | PDS | plastic rice

Sanjeeb Mukherjee  |  New Delhi 

The centre will bear the entire cost of rice fortification, of about Rs 2,700 crore per annum
Neither were PDS Dealers informed beforehand, nor have been village-level frontline workers of various departments made aware of fortified rice.

Even as the Centre plans to distribute iron-fortified across the Public Distribution System (PDS) by March 2024, a fact-finding team of civil society activists has found there is a perception on the ground, and fear, that ‘plastic-rice’ has been mixed with normal in the name of fortification. In some cases, beneficiaries have also complained of abdominal discomfort, gastritis, diarrhoea and nausea after eating fortified .

The fact-finding team also found serious lacunas and flaws in the manner in which the programme was being implemented in pilot districts that included distribution of fortified rice without proper labelling and warning about its adverse impact on people with sickle-cell anaemia and Thalassemia.

The fact-finding team included Dr Vandana Prasad, a public health expert also associated with the Right to Food campaign; Kavitha Kuruganti, farmers’ rights activist with ASHA-Kisan Swaraj; Balram and James Herenz of Right to Food Campaign, Jharkhand; Rohin Kumar of Greenpeace India; Soumik Banerjee of ASHA-Kisan Swaraj; and Raj Shekhar Singh of Right to Food Campaign National Secretariat.

The team visited five villages in Khunti and East Singhbhum districts between 8 and 10 May, 2022, and met with beneficiaries, dealers, CHC doctors, ASHA and Anganwadi workers, cooks in Anganwadis and schools, officials and patients in district-level hospitals, besides one rice mill owner and some others.

“Fortified rice is not a proven approach to tackle anaemia effectively, according to published papers and reviews. It is surprising that the Government of India, in a hasty blanket approach, has already scaled up distribution of fortified rice to 257 districts across India, even though the so-called ‘pilots’ have not completed three years, nor have they been evaluated. Even the findings have not been put out in the public domain,” an official statement by the team members said.

It said official data on the government portal shows fortified rice being distributed in two blocks of Jharkhand's East Singhbhum (the designated Pilot district in the state) only from October 2021.

“However, without any data being shared on the portal about the distribution in other districts, fortified rice has already been taken to several districts. What is the meaning or purpose of the Pilot then”, the team asked in its statement.

The team also found that a vast majority of women were picking out and throwing away the Fortified Rice Kernels (FRK) added to rice. These women includedthose who cooking for Anganwadi and School meals.

“FRKs are clearly identifiable from the real rice kernels. They are being picked out by hand, and later, during washing of the rice before cooking (FRK is floating up),” the team observed.

They also found that no information was given to, or prior consent obtained from, communities which had been recipients of this fortified rice.

Neither dealers nor village-level frontline workers of various departments were informed beforehand about the fortified rice.

“It appears as if the Government of India wanted to implement this programme quietly, if not clandestinely, and that the government was under the misapprehension that FRK blended with regular rice will go unnoticed and get consumed by citizens without any questions (being asked),” the report said.

The team also found that FSSAI and the government's own regulations on packaging and labelling of fortified food and strict warning as to who should not consume them were being clearly violated on the ground.

According to the Centre’s target, 37.5 million tonnes of fortified rice is planned to be distributed through the Targeted Public Distribution Scheme (TPDS) and Other Welfare Schemes (OWS) by March 2024. This, according to the 2020-21 foodgrains distribution plan, is equal to the entire quantum of rice allocated by the government.

According to a reply given in Parliament a few weeks ago, the Centre plans to distribute 3.5 million tonnes of fortified rice in ICDS and Pm-POSHAN schemes in the 2021-22 financial year. This will be scaled up to 17.5 million tonnes by March 2023 to include 291 aspirational districts alongside the ICDS and PM-POSHAN schemes.

Thereafter, by March 2024, all TPDS and OWS will be covered by fortified rice in the country.

Fortification of rice with essential nutrients has been started on a pilot basis for three years from 2019-20 with a total outlay of Rs 174.64 crore. The pilot focuses on 15 districts across 15 states (preferably one district per state).

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First Published: Wed, May 11 2022. 20:25 IST
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