Close X
Wednesday, November 13, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian-origin store owner hit with community order for hygiene offences in UK

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Nov, 2023 02:17 PM
  • Indian-origin store owner hit with community order for hygiene offences in UK

London, Nov 27 (IANS) An Indian-origin store owner has been hit with a community order after food contaminated with rat droppings and poison was found at his store in UK's Birmingham city last year.

Avtar Singh, 39, was sentenced to a 12-month community order with a requirement to complete 120 hours of unpaid work after he admitted to seven hygiene offences, BirminghamLive news website reported.

The Birmingham Magistrates' Court also ordered him pay 1,430 pounds in costs and a 114 pound victim surcharge.

Singh's offences date back to October 25 last year when city council officers discovered a number of issues at Singh's Diamond Drinks on Soho Road.

One of the charges stated there was 'rat activity in the premises' and another was concerned with "gaps in the structure that could permit the ingress of rats".

A further charge said that Singh "...failed to ensure that food was protected against any contamination likely to render the food unfit for human consumption, injurious to health, or contaminated in such a way that it would be unreasonable to expect it to be consumed in that state in that, packets of food were gnawed and contaminated by rat urine and rat kill cake".

The city council inspectors described the shop as 'dirty and poorly maintained' with lack of hand washing materials.

Further counts related to the failure to clean equipment which came into contact with food and the fact waste was stored inside an unlidded bin.

The shop, which is now under new ownership, has been revisited since the problems were discovered.

It was given a 1 out of 5 Food Standards Agency (FSA) rating, calling for 'major improvements'.

MORE International ARTICLES

AstraZeneca resuming US testing of COVID-19 vaccine

AstraZeneca resuming US testing of COVID-19 vaccine
The AstraZenca vaccine, developed with Oxford University, is one of several coronavirus vaccine candidates in final-stage testing around the world.

AstraZeneca resuming US testing of COVID-19 vaccine

FDA approves first COVID-19 drug: antiviral remdesivir

FDA approves first COVID-19 drug: antiviral remdesivir
The drug, which California-based Gilead Sciences Inc. is calling Veklury, cut the time to recovery by five days — from 15 days to 10 on average — in a large study led by the U.S. National Institutes of Health.

FDA approves first COVID-19 drug: antiviral remdesivir

Here we go again: Trump, Biden reprise debate duel

Here we go again: Trump, Biden reprise debate duel
Instead, they're bracing for another show of vintage Trump, one in which he'll seek to be heard even in spite of his muted microphone.

Here we go again: Trump, Biden reprise debate duel

Getting ready for the gong show: Trump v. Biden II

Getting ready for the gong show: Trump v. Biden II
It's the sequel to last month's debate horror show between Donald Trump and Joe Biden, an invective-laced 90 minutes that laid bare the depths to which political discourse can sink in an American election year.

Getting ready for the gong show: Trump v. Biden II

US overdose deaths appear to rise amid coronavirus pandemic

US overdose deaths appear to rise amid coronavirus pandemic
Davidson lost his job. He started staying home alone in his apartment near Georgetown, Kentucky — depressed and yearning for his recovery support group that had stopped gathering in person, said his cousin Melanie Wyatt.

US overdose deaths appear to rise amid coronavirus pandemic

Pfizer: Mid-November earliest it can seek virus vaccine OK

Pfizer: Mid-November earliest it can seek virus vaccine OK
Another leading U.S. contender, Moderna Inc., previously announced the earliest it could seek authorization of its own vaccine would be Nov. 25.

Pfizer: Mid-November earliest it can seek virus vaccine OK