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The Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 aims
at making provisions for the prevention of adulteration of food.
The Act extends to the whole of India and came into force on 1st
June 1955.
WHAT IS ADULTERATED
FOOD?
An article of food shall be deemed to be adulterated -
if the article sold by a vendor is not of
the nature, substance or quality demanded by the purchaser
or which it purports to be;
if the article contains any substance affecting
its quality or of it is so processed as to injuriously
affect its nature, substance or quality;
if any inferior or cheaper substance
has been substituted wholly or partly for the article,
or any constituent of the article has been wholly or partly
abstracted from it, so as to affecting its quality or of it
is so processed as to injuriously affect its nature, substance
or quality;
if the article had been prepared, packed or
kept under insanitary conditions whereby it has become
contaminated or injurious to health;
if the article consists wholly or in part of
any filthy, putrid, disgusting, rotten, decomposed or diseased
animal or vegetable substance or being insect-infested,
or is otherwise unfit for human consumption;
if the article is obtained from a diseased
animal;
if the article contains any poisonous
or other ingredient which is injurious to health;
if the container of the article is composed
of any poisonous or deleterious substance which renders
its contents injurious to health;
if the article contains any prohibited colouring
matter or preservative, or any permitted colouring
matter or preservative in excess of the prescribed limits;
if the quality or purity of the article
falls below the prescribed standard, or its constituents
are present in proportions other standard, or its constituents
are present in proportions other than those prescribed, whether
or not rendering it injurious to health.
Thus, additions of water to milk amount to adulteration,
within the meaning of sub-clauses (b) or (c).
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