NEW DELHI: India’s ruling Congress government has accused traders of cheating consumers as it struggles to reduce the cost of the vegetable known as the “poor man’s food” ahead of a string of state polls.
The price of onions, a staple in Indian cooking, have gone through the roof in the past few months, quadrupling to as much as 100 rupees a kilogram ($1.65) in parts of the country and turning the vegetable into an unaffordable luxury for the poor.
Traders are “cheating consumers,” Food Minister K.V. Thomas said in remarks aired Saturday, appealing for onions to be sold at “affordable rates.”
They “should not loot consumers,” he added.
The politically sensitive rise in the price of onions comes ahead of five regional assembly polls in November and December, seen as a dress rehearsal for general elections due by May 2014.
The Congress-led government has been struggling to curb imports to counter a record current account deficit, the broadest measure of trade. But such is its alarm as the state elections near that it plans to import thousands of tons of onions to reduce prices.
India is the world’s second-biggest onion grower after China and normally exports onions, but it has floated a tender to import onions to check the spiral in prices.
The state-run National Agricultural Cooperative Marketing Federation of India (NAFED) “is interested in importing onions of Pakistan, Iran, China and Egypt origin,” the co-operative said in the tender issued earlier in the week.
India traders ‘cheating consumers’ with onion prices
India traders ‘cheating consumers’ with onion prices
Trump says he’s dropping push for National Guard in Chicago, LA and Portland, Oregon, for now
WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump said he’s dropping — for now — his push to deploy National Guard troops in Chicago, Los Angeles and Portland, Oregon, a move that comes after legal roadblocks hung up the effort.
Trump said in a social media post Wednesday that he’s removing the Guard troops for now. “We will come back, perhaps in a much different and stronger form, when crime begins to soar again — Only a question of time!” he wrote.
Troops had already left Los Angeles after the president deployed them earlier this year as part of a broader crackdown on crime and immigration. They had been sent to Chicago and Portland but were never on the streets as legal challenges played out.
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