A spokesman for Nestle India, which
has said it has carried out extensive independent and internal tests, said the
company has not yet been notified of the complaint.
Food inspectors file case against
Nestle over noodles
Food safety inspectors in the
northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh said they had filed a criminal
complaint against Nestle's local arm after saying they had found high
levels of lead in some packets of Maggi instant noodles
Nestle India, which disputes the
findings, has said the batch in question was manufactured in February 2014 so
was already past its sell-by date in April this year and would have been
automatically collected from retailers by the time the inspectors announced a
recall of the products.
A spokesman for Nestle India, which
has said it has carried out extensive independent and internal tests, said the
company has not yet been notified of the complaint.
The noodles, which sell at roughly a
dozen rupees ($0.20) per single-serving packet, are a hugely popular snack in
India and Maggi has long been market leader.
The action was filed at a local
court in the city of Barabanki, about 30 kilometers east of the capital
Lucknow, and a hearing has been set for July 1, an official at the local Food
and Drug Administration (FDA) said.
The Uttar Pradesh FDA had ordered a
recall of a 200,000-pack batch of noodles at the end of April, after a spot
check which it said showed elevated levels of monosodium glutamate (MSG), a
flavour enhancer, and lead 17 times above the permissible limit.
Nestle India, whose parent is
Swiss-based foods group Nestle SA, said it had shared with the authorities test
results that conclude its noodles are safe to eat.
"We regularly monitor all
our raw material for lead, including testing by accredited laboratories which
have consistently shown levels in Maggi noodles to be within permissible limits,"
Nestle said in a statement.
The FDA official confirmed on Monday
that as well as Nestle India the complaint included the manufacturing unit, the
retailer selling the tainted packs, two Nestle managers and even Bollywood
stars who promoted the two-minute snack. ($1 = 63.6000 Indian rupees)
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