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namo narayana

 

Respected All,

 

In my past emails I was trying to raise awareness about the horrendous atrocities done to our cows for obtaining her milk/meat/leather.

 

I am now forwarding a email from another e-group, of how such greed of making quick profits by having absolutely NO compassion for both human and animal health is happening in India (where the cows are supposedly to be "worshiped')

 

Please read of the dangers of adulterated milk products flooding the market, which can cause life-long damage to human health.

 

Avoid Milk/milk products and save yourself and the cows from unnecessary sufferings!

 

Sincerely,

Kamlesh--- On Thu, 10/15/09, viji <viji123 wrote:

viji <viji123[asthikasamaj] Spurious milk products flood Diwali marketviji123Date: Thursday, October 15, 2009, 6:11 PM

 

 

 

 

Spurious milk products flood Diwali market http://www.business -standard. com/india/ news/spurious- milk-products- flood-diwali- market/373387/Vishnu Pandey / New Delhi/ Kanpur October 16, 2009In the backdrop of the ongoing festive season, the business of manufacturing and supplying synthetic milk and milk products to the city dwellers and even to the neighbouring states is growing by the day. The manufacturers are minting millions by endangering the health and life of citizens, as the racket continues to flourish despite a number of raids by the health officials.According to an estimate, at least 100,000 litres of synthetic milk and 30 tonnes of thickened milk (khoya) is being manufactured everyday in the city. The racketeers use refined oil, white poster colours, some milk, caustic soda and formalin as solvent to manufacture the poisonous ‘milk’. They also use low quality refined oil,

wheat flour, rice bran and chemical colours to lend an attractive look to the products.According to medical officers, over 17 people indulging in the illegal manufacture were arrested and imprisoned while the search for further culprits was still on.Diwali spoiler: Lid off spurious sweets racket http://indiatoday. intoday.in/ index.php? option=com_ content & task=view & issueid=111 & id=66344 & Itemid=1 & sectionid=114 & secid=141Arun Singh & Harish Sharma Meerut, October 14, 2009 Your Diwali sweets may be yum, but are they safe? Authorities have seized at least 30,000 kg of adulterated sweets or their ingredients in the past one week, exposing an elaborate racket thriving in north India this festive season.Massive haulsOfficials said around 8,000 kg of adulterated khoya was confiscated from Uttarakhand' s Udham Singh Nagar. Another 4,000 kg meant for Delhi and

Noida was seized by the police in Ghaziabad. Approximately 1,000 kg of contaminated khoya was recovered from Jabalpur and 7,000 kg from Indore.The stocks of adulterated sweets seized too are alarming - around 6,000 kg from Ludhiana and 2,000 kg from Patiala. In Shivpuri, Madhya Pradesh, shop-owners clashed with police when a van full of adulterated khoya was seized.Delhi on alert, says ministerThe spurious items were on way to shops in Delhi and other cities ahead of Diwali. Delhi Health Minister Kiran Walia said the government was cracking down on the adulterated supplies with a heavy hand. "We have put SDMs on duty at all entry points to the Capital. Over 100 raids have been carried out in the last three days," Walia said.Inside the khoya factoriesHeadlines Today went to a dairy in Meerut to investigate and found the khoya used in preparing sweets lying in a pool of mulch full of ants. "Absolutely pure

khoya is not being made these days," said Satish, the cook at the dairy. "We make it only as per demand."Usually, thickened milk is used to make khoya. But in this dairy, inexpensive milk powder was being lumped in to double the produce. Further, refined oil was being used to smoothen the texture of khoya - almost 10 litres of oil for 50 kg of khoya.Chemicals, synthetic colours and a bit of pure ghee were also put to give the khoya the right colour and scent and avoid suspicion."Nobody makes pure khoya these days. It doesn't sell," said Rajkumar, another cook, backing Satish's claim. "Even in the 'pure' variety, about 25 kg of adulterated ingredients are put in around 75 kg of milk."Adulterated sweets are a huge business during the festive season as the consumption is high and the profit margin big. A kilogram of milkcake that one may buy for Rs 250 can be prepared for just Rs 55 using adulterated ingredients."A

lot of semolina is being mixed in the milk cake," said Liyakat Ali at another sweets factory in Meerut.The milk cake he was producing had no milk. "We use milk powder. Where will one get so much milk from? Anyone claiming to use milk is lying," claimed Ali, who makes around 300-400 kg of adulterated milkcakes.Health hazardsConsuming adulterated sweets can invite serious health problems. "One could suffer from food poisoning or problems in the gastro-intestinal system, such as vomiting, diarrhoea and abdominal pain. If the milk is adulterated, one could develop esophageal strictures," said Dr Neelam Mohan, hepatologist.The urea used to make contaminated khoya and synthetic milk can affect the heart, liver and kidneys. Adulterated oil used in the sweets can cause dropsy. Synthetic colours can lead to diarrhoea or even paralysis and cancer.

Warning issued in India over milk-based sweetshttp://www.cbc. ca/consumer/ story/2009/10/ 15/india- milk- warning-factory- synthetic- diwali.htmlOctober 15, 2009 CBC News Workers carry sweets at a shop in Ahmadabad, India. Diwali, the festival of lights will be celebrated on Oct. 17 amid concerns in some regions about tainted milk products. (Ajit Solanki/Associated Press) Doctors in northern India are warning residents to avoid eating dairy-based sweets during a major Hindu festival this weekend after police raided two factories and found them using detergent and animal fat in the manufacture of milk and milk products.The warning comes as India prepares for Diwali, the festival of lights, on Saturday, when residents are expected to consume and give gifts of

sweets, many of which are made from milk products.Police said 28 people were arrested in raids Wednesday in two towns in Uttar Pradesh state, and about 1,000 litres of synthetic milk were seized."Milk products manufactured from urea, caustic soda and animal fat were recovered from two makeshift factories," said police official Brij Lal.N.C. Khanna, a scientist at the Indian Institute of Toxicology Research, said the synthetic milk is prepared by mixing the organic compound urea with caustic soda, cheap cooking oil, water and a common detergent. The detergent emulsifies and dissolves the oil in water and creates a frothy white solution that looks like milk.The blend is then added to natural milk before it is sold, he said.Doctors say the synthetic milk is carcinogenic and urea and caustic soda are harmful to the heart, liver and kidneys. Caustic soda, found in oven and drain cleaners, is particularly

harmful even in small doses and could prove fatal for people suffering from hypertension and heart ailments, according to Dr. Lalit Saxena, a scientist at Biomab Pharmaceuticals Private Ltd, in Goa, India."Please do not eat sweets this Diwali. Avoid them as there is no guarantee of its purity," said Dr. D.P. Mishra of the state-run Balrampur Hospital in Lucknow.Last November six children died and more than 60 fell ill after drinking adulturated milk in a state school in eastern India.The news comes about 13 months after a Chinese dairy recalled hundreds of tonnes of baby formula in one of country's worst food safety scandals. Milk powder contaminated with the industrial chemical melamine killed at least six babies and sickened almost 300,000 others with painful kidney stones.With files from The Associated Press

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Hari-Om

 

Dear Gurudev,

 

I am happy to read your persistant e-mails on this issue but it turns out except

our own few members noone pays any attention to the cows' agony.

The public is not concerned about health issues or the sufferings of the cows as

long as they get their requirements, original milk, adulterated, artificial or

for that matter donkey's milk .

So long as there is demand there will be business irrrespective of the couple of

arrests the police make.

What is required is public awareness. non-stop advertising about the hazards of

using milk and milk products. Will the mediabe prepared to spearhead this

compaign ? very doubtful. Afterall they too are in business, aren't they ?

To start with Hindu temples should stop making and offering milk products to the

deities and even stop milk abhishekam. Swamis and sadhus should avoid drinking

milk .

Is it feasible ? Not in hundred years. Not when such tempting goodies such as

ice cream, milk shake, peda and so on are there for the asking.

 

A very sweet Depvli.

 

jai shree krishna

 

Achuthan Nair !

 

 

 

guruvayur , Veryytterium <veryytterium wrote:

>

> namo narayana

>  

> Respected All,

>  

> In my past emails I was trying to raise awareness about the horrendous

atrocities done to our cows for obtaining her milk/meat/leather.

>  

> I am now forwarding a email from another e-group, of how such greed of making

quick profits by having absolutely NO  compassion for both human and animal

health is happening in India (where the cows are supposedly to be " worshiped')

>  

> Please read of the dangers of adulterated milk products flooding the market,

which can cause life-long damage to human health.

>  

> Avoid Milk/milk products and save yourself and the cows from unnecessary

sufferings!

>  

> Sincerely,

> Kamlesh

>

> --- On Thu, 10/15/09, viji <viji123 wrote:

>

>

> viji <viji123

> [asthikasamaj] Spurious milk products flood Diwali market

> viji123

> Thursday, October 15, 2009, 6:11 PM

>

>

>  

>

Spurious milk products flood Diwali market

>

> http://www.business -standard. com/india/ news/spurious- milk-products-

flood-diwali- market/373387/

>

> Vishnu Pandey / New Delhi/ Kanpur October 16, 2009

>

> In the backdrop of the ongoing festive season, the business of manufacturing

and supplying synthetic milk and milk products to the city dwellers and even to

the neighbouring states is growing by the day. The manufacturers are minting

millions by endangering the health and life of citizens, as the racket continues

to flourish despite a number of raids by the health officials.

>

> According to an estimate, at least 100,000 litres of synthetic milk and 30

tonnes of thickened milk (khoya) is being manufactured everyday in the city. The

racketeers use refined oil, white poster colours, some milk, caustic soda and

formalin as solvent to manufacture the poisonous ‘milk’. They also use low

quality refined oil, wheat flour, rice bran and chemical colours to lend an

attractive look to the products.

>

> According to medical officers, over 17 people indulging in the illegal

manufacture were arrested and imprisoned while the search for further culprits

was still on.

>

> Diwali spoiler: Lid off spurious sweets racket

>

> http://indiatoday. intoday.in/ index.php? option=com_

content & task=view & issueid=111 & id=66344 & Itemid=1 & sectionid=114 & secid=141

>

> Arun Singh & Harish Sharma

> Meerut, October 14, 2009

>

> Your Diwali sweets may be yum, but are they safe? Authorities have seized at

least 30,000 kg of adulterated sweets or their ingredients in the past one week,

exposing an elaborate racket thriving in north India this festive season.

>

> Massive hauls

> Officials said around 8,000 kg of adulterated khoya was confiscated from

Uttarakhand' s Udham Singh Nagar. Another 4,000 kg meant for Delhi and Noida was

seized by the police in Ghaziabad. Approximately 1,000 kg of contaminated khoya

was recovered from Jabalpur and 7,000 kg from Indore.

>

> The stocks of adulterated sweets seized too are alarming - around 6,000 kg

from Ludhiana and 2,000 kg from Patiala. In Shivpuri, Madhya Pradesh,

shop-owners clashed with police when a van full of adulterated khoya was seized.

>

> Delhi on alert, says minister

> The spurious items were on way to shops in Delhi and other cities ahead of

Diwali. Delhi Health Minister Kiran Walia said the government was cracking down

on the adulterated supplies with a heavy hand.

>

> " We have put SDMs on duty at all entry points to the Capital. Over 100 raids

have been carried out in the last three days, " Walia said.

>

> Inside the khoya factories

> Headlines Today went to a dairy in Meerut to investigate and found the khoya

used in preparing sweets lying in a pool of mulch full of ants.

>

> " Absolutely pure khoya is not being made these days, " said Satish, the cook at

the dairy. " We make it only as per demand. "

>

> Usually, thickened milk is used to make khoya. But in this dairy, inexpensive

milk powder was being lumped in to double the produce. Further, refined oil was

being used to smoothen the texture of khoya - almost 10 litres of oil for 50 kg

of khoya.

>

> Chemicals, synthetic colours and a bit of pure ghee were also put to give the

khoya the right colour and scent and avoid suspicion.

>

> " Nobody makes pure khoya these days. It doesn't sell, " said Rajkumar, another

cook, backing Satish's claim. " Even in the 'pure' variety, about 25 kg of

adulterated ingredients are put in around 75 kg of milk. "

>

> Adulterated sweets are a huge business during the festive season as the

consumption is high and the profit margin big. A kilogram of milkcake that one

may buy for Rs 250 can be prepared for just Rs 55 using adulterated ingredients.

>

> " A lot of semolina is being mixed in the milk cake, " said Liyakat Ali at

another sweets factory in Meerut.

>

> The milk cake he was producing had no milk. " We use milk powder. Where will

one get so much milk from? Anyone claiming to use milk is lying, " claimed Ali,

who makes around 300-400 kg of adulterated milkcakes.

>

> Health hazards

> Consuming adulterated sweets can invite serious health problems. " One could

suffer from food poisoning or problems in the gastro-intestinal system, such as

vomiting, diarrhoea and abdominal pain. If the milk is adulterated, one could

develop esophageal strictures, " said Dr Neelam Mohan, hepatologist.

>

> The urea used to make contaminated khoya and synthetic milk can affect the

heart, liver and kidneys. Adulterated oil used in the sweets can cause dropsy.

Synthetic colours can lead to diarrhoea or even paralysis and cancer.

>

>

> Warning issued in India over milk-based sweets

>

> http://www.cbc. ca/consumer/ story/2009/10/ 15/india- milk- warning-factory-

synthetic- diwali.html

>

> October 15, 2009

> CBC News

> Workers carry sweets at a shop in Ahmadabad, India. Diwali, the festival of

lights will be celebrated on Oct. 17 amid concerns in some regions about tainted

milk products. (Ajit Solanki/Associated Press)

>

> Doctors in northern India are warning residents to avoid eating dairy-based

sweets during a major Hindu festival this weekend after police raided two

factories and found them using detergent and animal fat in the manufacture of

milk and milk products.

>

> The warning comes as India prepares for Diwali, the festival of lights, on

Saturday, when residents are expected to consume and give gifts of sweets, many

of which are made from milk products.

>

> Police said 28 people were arrested in raids Wednesday in two towns in Uttar

Pradesh state, and about 1,000 litres of synthetic milk were seized.

>

> " Milk products manufactured from urea, caustic soda and animal fat were

recovered from two makeshift factories, " said police official Brij Lal.

>

> N.C. Khanna, a scientist at the Indian Institute of Toxicology Research, said

the synthetic milk is prepared by mixing the organic compound urea with caustic

soda, cheap cooking oil, water and a common detergent. The detergent emulsifies

and dissolves the oil in water and creates a frothy white solution that looks

like milk.

>

> The blend is then added to natural milk before it is sold, he said.

>

> Doctors say the synthetic milk is carcinogenic and urea and caustic soda are

harmful to the heart, liver and kidneys.

>

> Caustic soda, found in oven and drain cleaners, is particularly harmful even

in small doses and could prove fatal for people suffering from hypertension and

heart ailments, according to Dr. Lalit Saxena, a scientist at Biomab

Pharmaceuticals Private Ltd, in Goa, India.

>

> " Please do not eat sweets this Diwali. Avoid them as there is no guarantee of

its purity, " said Dr. D.P. Mishra of the state-run Balrampur Hospital in

Lucknow.

>

> Last November six children died and more than 60 fell ill after drinking

adulturated milk in a state school in eastern India.

>

> The news comes about 13 months after a Chinese dairy recalled hundreds of

tonnes of baby formula in one of country's worst food safety scandals. Milk

powder contaminated with the industrial chemical melamine killed at least six

babies and sickened almost 300,000 others with painful kidney stones.With files

from The Associated Press

>

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During last Onam season, the requirement of milk and milk products increased in Kerala. Govt warned the people not to go for unknown brands since spurious and poisonous milk was said to come to Kerala from nearby places. But whick household will stop making pal payasam. Trade in spurious things is very rampant and it is for the govt and the employees to take action and see that the public health is protected. Fruits are sprayed with poisonous chemicals, Even flowers are sprayed with with chemicals so that they may not dry and whither away. I handled some flowers bought from the market in 2008 during Onam, and my finger turned black and even today I and suffering from some allergic desease. Please refrain from offering such poisonous milk as prasadam to the Lord and distribute to the crowd of devotees.

 

Ramachandra Menon--- On Sat, 17/10/09, Achuthan Nair <anair1101 wrote:

Achuthan Nair <anair1101[Guruvayur] Re: Fw: [asthikasamaj] Spurious milk products flood Diwali marketguruvayur Date: Saturday, 17 October, 2009, 5:28 AM

Hari-OmDear Gurudev,I am happy to read your persistant e-mails on this issue but it turns out except our own few members noone pays any attention to the cows' agony. The public is not concerned about health issues or the sufferings of the cows as long as they get their requirements, original milk, adulterated, artificial or for that matter donkey's milk .So long as there is demand there will be business irrrespective of the couple of arrests the police make. What is required is public awareness. non-stop advertising about the hazards of using milk and milk products. Will the mediabe prepared to spearhead this compaign ? very doubtful. Afterall they too are in business, aren't they ? To start with Hindu temples should stop making and offering milk products to the deities and even stop milk abhishekam. Swamis and sadhus should avoid drinking milk . Is it feasible ? Not in hundred years. Not when such tempting

goodies such as ice cream, milk shake, peda and so on are there for the asking. A very sweet Depvli.jai shree krishnaAchuthan Nair !guruvayur@grou ps.com, Veryytterium <veryytterium@ ...> wrote:>> namo narayana>  > Respected All,>  > In my past emails I was trying to raise awareness about the horrendous atrocities done to our cows for obtaining her milk/meat/leather. >  > I am now forwarding a email from another e-group, of how such greed of making quick profits by having absolutely NO  compassion for both human and animal health is happening in India (where the cows are supposedly to be "worshiped')>  > Please read of the dangers of

adulterated milk products flooding the market, which can cause life-long damage to human health.> Â > Avoid Milk/milk products and save yourself and the cows from unnecessary sufferings!> Â > Sincerely,> Kamlesh> > --- On Thu, 10/15/09, viji <viji123 > wrote:> > > viji <viji123 >> [asthikasamaj] Spurious milk products flood Diwali market> viji123 Thursday, October 15, 2009, 6:11 PM> > > Â > > > > > > > > Spurious milk products flood Diwali market > > http://www.business -standard. com/india/ news/spurious- milk-products- flood-diwali- market/373387/> > Vishnu Pandey / New Delhi/ Kanpur October 16, 2009> > In the

backdrop of the ongoing festive season, the business of manufacturing and supplying synthetic milk and milk products to the city dwellers and even to the neighbouring states is growing by the day. The manufacturers are minting millions by endangering the health and life of citizens, as the racket continues to flourish despite a number of raids by the health officials.> > According to an estimate, at least 100,000 litres of synthetic milk and 30 tonnes of thickened milk (khoya) is being manufactured everyday in the city. The racketeers use refined oil, white poster colours, some milk, caustic soda and formalin as solvent to manufacture the poisonous ‘milk’. They also use low quality refined oil, wheat flour, rice bran and chemical colours to lend an attractive look to the products.> > According to medical officers, over 17 people indulging in the illegal manufacture were arrested and imprisoned while the search

for further culprits was still on.> > Diwali spoiler: Lid off spurious sweets racket > > http://indiatoday. intoday.in/ index.php? option=com_ content & task= view & issueid= 111 & id=66344 & Itemid=1 & sectionid= 114 & secid= 141> > Arun Singh & Harish Sharma > Meerut, October 14, 2009 > > Your Diwali sweets may be yum, but are they safe? Authorities have seized at least 30,000 kg of adulterated sweets or their ingredients in the past one week, exposing an elaborate racket thriving in north India this festive season.> > Massive hauls> Officials said around 8,000 kg of adulterated khoya was confiscated from Uttarakhand' s Udham Singh Nagar. Another 4,000 kg meant for Delhi and Noida was seized by the police in Ghaziabad. Approximately 1,000 kg of contaminated khoya was recovered from Jabalpur

and 7,000 kg from Indore.> > The stocks of adulterated sweets seized too are alarming - around 6,000 kg from Ludhiana and 2,000 kg from Patiala. In Shivpuri, Madhya Pradesh, shop-owners clashed with police when a van full of adulterated khoya was seized.> > Delhi on alert, says minister> The spurious items were on way to shops in Delhi and other cities ahead of Diwali. Delhi Health Minister Kiran Walia said the government was cracking down on the adulterated supplies with a heavy hand. > > "We have put SDMs on duty at all entry points to the Capital. Over 100 raids have been carried out in the last three days," Walia said.> > Inside the khoya factories> Headlines Today went to a dairy in Meerut to investigate and found the khoya used in preparing sweets lying in a pool of mulch full of ants. > > "Absolutely pure khoya is not being made these days," said Satish, the cook

at the dairy. "We make it only as per demand."> > Usually, thickened milk is used to make khoya. But in this dairy, inexpensive milk powder was being lumped in to double the produce. Further, refined oil was being used to smoothen the texture of khoya - almost 10 litres of oil for 50 kg of khoya.> > Chemicals, synthetic colours and a bit of pure ghee were also put to give the khoya the right colour and scent and avoid suspicion.> > "Nobody makes pure khoya these days. It doesn't sell," said Rajkumar, another cook, backing Satish's claim. "Even in the 'pure' variety, about 25 kg of adulterated ingredients are put in around 75 kg of milk."> > Adulterated sweets are a huge business during the festive season as the consumption is high and the profit margin big. A kilogram of milkcake that one may buy for Rs 250 can be prepared for just Rs 55 using adulterated ingredients.> > "A lot of

semolina is being mixed in the milk cake," said Liyakat Ali at another sweets factory in Meerut.> > The milk cake he was producing had no milk. "We use milk powder. Where will one get so much milk from? Anyone claiming to use milk is lying," claimed Ali, who makes around 300-400 kg of adulterated milkcakes.> > Health hazards> Consuming adulterated sweets can invite serious health problems. "One could suffer from food poisoning or problems in the gastro-intestinal system, such as vomiting, diarrhoea and abdominal pain. If the milk is adulterated, one could develop esophageal strictures," said Dr Neelam Mohan, hepatologist.> > The urea used to make contaminated khoya and synthetic milk can affect the heart, liver and kidneys. Adulterated oil used in the sweets can cause dropsy. Synthetic colours can lead to diarrhoea or even paralysis and cancer. > > > Warning issued in India over

milk-based sweets> > http://www.cbc. ca/consumer/ story/2009/10/ 15/india- milk- warning-factory- synthetic- diwali.html> > October 15, 2009 > CBC News > Workers carry sweets at a shop in Ahmadabad, India. Diwali, the festival of lights will be celebrated on Oct. 17 amid concerns in some regions about tainted milk products. (Ajit Solanki/Associated Press) > > Doctors in northern India are warning residents to avoid eating dairy-based sweets during a major Hindu festival this weekend after police raided two factories and found them using detergent and animal fat in the manufacture of milk and milk products.> > The warning comes as India prepares for Diwali, the festival of lights, on Saturday, when residents are expected to consume and give gifts of sweets, many of which are made from milk products.> > Police said

28 people were arrested in raids Wednesday in two towns in Uttar Pradesh state, and about 1,000 litres of synthetic milk were seized.> > "Milk products manufactured from urea, caustic soda and animal fat were recovered from two makeshift factories," said police official Brij Lal.> > N.C. Khanna, a scientist at the Indian Institute of Toxicology Research, said the synthetic milk is prepared by mixing the organic compound urea with caustic soda, cheap cooking oil, water and a common detergent. The detergent emulsifies and dissolves the oil in water and creates a frothy white solution that looks like milk.> > The blend is then added to natural milk before it is sold, he said.> > Doctors say the synthetic milk is carcinogenic and urea and caustic soda are harmful to the heart, liver and kidneys. > > Caustic soda, found in oven and drain cleaners, is particularly harmful even in small

doses and could prove fatal for people suffering from hypertension and heart ailments, according to Dr. Lalit Saxena, a scientist at Biomab Pharmaceuticals Private Ltd, in Goa, India.> > "Please do not eat sweets this Diwali. Avoid them as there is no guarantee of its purity," said Dr. D.P. Mishra of the state-run Balrampur Hospital in Lucknow.> > Last November six children died and more than 60 fell ill after drinking adulturated milk in a state school in eastern India.> > The news comes about 13 months after a Chinese dairy recalled hundreds of tonnes of baby formula in one of country's worst food safety scandals. Milk powder contaminated with the industrial chemical melamine killed at least six babies and sickened almost 300,000 others with painful kidney stones.With files from The Associated Press>

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