Tainted Bites, Tainted Rights: Food Adulteration as a Human Rights Violation in India
Keywords:
Food Adulteration, Human Rights Violation, Article 21, FSSAI, Safe Consumption, Legal FrameworkAbstract
In India, food is more than sustenance—it is culture, care, and connection. Yet, the growing menace of food adulteration has turned this daily act of nourishment into a silent threat. This article explores food adulteration not merely as a public health issue, but as a violation of fundamental human rights, particularly the right to life under Article 21 of the Indian Constitution.
Drawing from the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954, the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006, and the Consumer Protection Act, 2019, the article examines how legal frameworks attempt to safeguard citizens, but often fall short due to weak enforcement, outdated penalties, and rural-urban disparities. It also links India’s obligations under international instruments like the UDHR and ICESCR, which recognize the right to adequate, safe food.
Through real cases, judicial precedents, and policy analysis, the article argues that food safety is not a luxury, it is a legal and moral necessity. It calls for stronger FSSAI infrastructure, legal reforms, public awareness, and technological solutions like blockchain and AI in food traceability. Ultimately, it urges society, governance, and law to treat food safety as a non-negotiable human right, because every bite should nourish, not endanger life.
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