Whenever
I go to buy groceries, my list invariably includes some toiletries
and household cleaning stuff along with the food items. While
bringing back the purchases, I take a simple precaution, which all
the readers also must also be following. I pack all the toiletries
and cleaning stuff in a separate bag and see that these are not mixed
with the food items. This precaution is to ensure that the traces of
cleaning stuff, which usually comprise of some poisonous material or
other, under no circumstances get mixed up with food. This precaution
is so basic that I stand aghast and feel horrified to learn that a
school headmistress of a school in Dharmashati Gandaman village of
Saran district from Bihar state of India, who is supposed to be an
educated person, would ever store bags of fertilisers and pesticides,
next to bags of potato, rice and cooking oil, meant for cooking free
meals to children in her school, in her own house.
Consequences
have turned out to be absolutely disastrous and a calamity as 27 of
the young children, who had consumed cooked food prepared from the
raw materials, stored in Headmistress's house, have died a terrible
death due to food poisoning. Police are yet to ascertain whether food
adulteration was of food or the cooking oil and whether it was
accidental or a deliberate criminal act of poisoning, as alleged by
some people, after initial tests showed traces of insecticide.
The
primary school, runs in a 20x15ft room, which also serves as a
community hall for weddings in the village. Midday meals were cooked
in the small veranda by a cooks designated as 'sevika,' Pano Devi
and Manju Devi. On that fateful day, Pano did not report for duty and
a meal of rice and soya curry was cooked by Manju. She and her two
children also ate the meal and fell sick. It appears that the cook
had informed the principal that the mustard oil given to her by the
headmistress to make soya curry, had a foul smell. Things however are
more complicated as the food stuff was supplied by Headmistress Meena
Kumari's husband Arjun Rai who runs a store in the village. The food
poisoning was so severe that one of the victims had died within
minutes of eating the lunch.
In a
natural reaction angry villagers have turned violent and have
ransacked the Headmistress Meena Kumari's house and other Government
offices. Headmistress and her Husband are both absconding. Villagers
have been demanding death for them.
Where
do we go from here? The law would take its own course and the
culprits would be surely punished and brought to justice. The heart
breaking loss these 27 families have suffered is impossible to
reconcile without any doubt. There has been much debate in the media
about India's midday meal scheme itself, which is world’s largest
school feeding programme involving 120 million children.
Secretary
of an institution, which runs a number of Pre-Primary and Primary
schools withing city boundaries of my home town Pune, is a relative
of mine. After this disastrous event, I asked her about the midday
meal scheme as it is organized in Pune city for Primary level
students. This is what she had to say.
The
food stuffs are purchased by the administration of the District
itself directly. However Principals or headmistresses of the
beneficiary schools have the right to inspect quality of food grains.
Cooking area, utensils, cooking and
serving staff are all
centralized and controlled by district administration again. School
have right here again to check quality of cooked meals. Usually one
or two teachers would always taste the meals for taste and spiciness
before serving staff serves the food to the children.
Schools
are basically accountable for keeping tab on number of meals served
and whether children were given food (Quantity of rice) as per
Government rules. This seemed to me a fair arrangement because
centralized cooking can be controlled very effectively.
However,
I do not really know, what happens in small towns and villages, where
local politicians are in a position to make a quick buck by bending
some rules. Midday meal scheme, everyone connected with it agrees is
extremely beneficial to children. Many poor children of India, have
started attending schools because they get a square meal. The primary
school attendance has grown by many folds, since this scheme has been
started.
Just
because one Meena Kumari and her husband, have singlehandedly managed to cause this
irreconcilable tragic loss either with their utter negligence or with
a criminal intent, I feel that 120 Million primary school children
of India should not be deprived of one square meal, which some of
them may find hard to get otherwise. Midday meal scheme should
continue without any doubt, but with many more and tighter controls
and with full transparency so that any parent or media
representative can assure himself, about quality and purity of food
stuffs purchased and how the meals are prepared, distributed and
served.
22
July 2013
Very sad news.
ReplyDeleteI do agree with the opinion though - free meal programme should continue (with stricter rules and regulations).