শুক্রবার, ১৩ জুন, ২০১৪

Much ado about nothing Equipped with inadequate chemical testing kits, police embark on adulterated fruit drive

Police at a checkpost at Gabtoli in the capital late Wednesday night. They were checking to see if fruits entering the capital on trucks were tainted with formalin. They did not have the equipment to check for other toxic substances. Photo: Anisur Rahman
Police at a checkpost at Gabtoli in the capital late Wednesday night. They were checking to see if fruits entering the capital on trucks were tainted with formalin. They did not have the equipment to check for other toxic substances. 

Instead of taking any initiative at the orchards and wholesale markets outside Dhaka, the government has started a drive for checking formalin in fruits with a kit called Formaldehyde Metre Z-300 at the entry points of the capital.

Though the drive conducted by Dhaka Metropolitan Police (DMP) and Bangladesh Standard and Testing Institute (BSTI) officials created much hype, doubts also surfaced in the media whether it would yield any result.
The farmers and orchard owners use four to five types of toxic chemicals including insecticides, ripening hormones and preservatives from the flowering process of fruit till harvesting. But the Formaldehyde Metre is only able to detect formalin and some gases.

Out of 1,925 trucks which entered the city from around 8:00pm Wednesday till 6:00am yesterday, a total of 208 trucks were found loaded with fruits and sample from those were tested. But the DMP did not say from how many of those 208 trucks were carrying formalin-soaked fruits.  

In a briefing yesterday noon, the DMP Joint Commissioner Manirul Islam said the fruit traders changed their strategies. They might have been unloading fruit trucks on the city outskirts and bringing those by other mode of transports like bus or covered van.  

The Daily Star visited Aminbazar on Wednesday night to see the arrangements for the drive.
There was a dais in front of a tent set up just after Aminbazar bridge. A bulldozer of Dhaka North City Corporation which came to destroy formalin-tainted fruits also remained parked nearby.  

A police officer was handling the formalin detection work with the formaldehyde metre. A magistrate and another one from BSTI was present there.
Police members were filling a polythene bag with the samples, collected from intercepted trucks. And then the formaldehyde metre was placed into that bag and kept for two minutes.
“If those fruits are tainted with formalin, the formalin would evaporate inside the polythene bag and meter of the machine would detect it and show on the monitor,” Khalid Mahmud, Focal Point officer of the DMP headquarters, explained while he was testing a sample of tomatoes.
Eight such teams deployed at Postogola Bridge, Waisghat at Sadarghat, Abdullahpur bridge, Dhaur bridge in Ashulia, Babubazar Bridge, Gabtoli, Jatrabari Police Station and the intersection near Kamal bridge at Demra yesterday destroyed total 3,000 mounds of mangoes, 200 mounds of berries (jam) and 15 lakh litchis.
A magistrate from one of the spots sent three traders to jail -- two for six months and another one for 15 days -- while 12 others were fined Tk 85,000, said DMP joint commissioner in a briefing yesterday.  
Apart from mangos, litchis and berries, and the teams also tested jackfruits, dates, banana, palm, lotkon, malta, pineapple and apple.  
In the tests, they detected 2.48 to 125 ppm (parts per million) of formalin in mangos, 1.49 to 31pmm in litchis, 33 to 35ppm in berries. The tolerable level for human is 0.15ppm, he said.
During the visit on Wednesday night, it was seen whenever a truck was crossing the bridge, policemen signal lights in hand ran towards the vehicles. With the cops checking all the trucks, long tailbacks were created at all entry points.

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