logo
SC seeks response from Centre, states on plea for consumer 'right to know'

SC seeks response from Centre, states on plea for consumer 'right to know'

The Supreme Court on Monday sought responses from the Centre and the states on a plea to declare consumers had a "right to know" about products aside from the details of distributors and sellers.
A bench of Justices Vikram Nath and Sandeep Mehta sought the responses within four weeks.
The petition filed by petitioner Ashwini Kumar Upadhyay said "right to know" was crucial for consumers to make informed choices and to protect themselves from unfair or restrictive trade practices and unscrupulous exploitation.
The plea sought directions to the authorities concerned to ensure every distributor, trader and shop owner displayed details of registration, including name, address, phone number and number of employees at the entry gate in bold letters on a display board visible to people.
"Right to know helps consumers avoid falling prey to a fraudulent or deceptive distributor, dealer, trader, seller and shop owner, who might misrepresent a product/service or disappear after sale, purchase and money transaction," said the plea, filed through advocate Ashwani Kumar Dubey.
If a consumer has an issue with a product or service, the plea said, knowing details of the distributor, dealer, and seller was essential for filing a complaint and seeking redressal through consumer redressal fora.
"When a distributor, dealer, trader, seller and shop owner are transparent about their details, it fosters a fair and competitive market where consumers can make informed choices," the plea said.
The plea further argues that the the right to know empowers consumers to be informed or protected and to make choices when engaging in sales, purchases and money transactions.
The petitioner underlined not only does the consumer have the right to know about quality, quantity, potency, purity, standard, manufacturing date, expiry date and BIS or FSSAI certification of the goods or products, but also the details of the distributor, dealer, trader, seller and shop owner.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

"My Family Created Israel": The Rothschilds And Birth Of A Nation
"My Family Created Israel": The Rothschilds And Birth Of A Nation

NDTV

time27 minutes ago

  • NDTV

"My Family Created Israel": The Rothschilds And Birth Of A Nation

New Delhi: Lord Victor Rothschild spoke in the British parliament only twice. Once, to champion milk pasteurisation, a public health issue. The other, to throw his weight behind the creation of a Jewish homeland. Few families in modern history have wielded as much influence as the Rothschilds. In Israel, their fingerprints are embedded in the land itself. "My family created Israel," his son, Lord Jacob Rothschild, once said. And he wasn't exaggerating. The truth will come out about the Rothschilds. Listen to Jacob Rothschild say it with his own mouth: 'My family created Israel.' — Red Pill USA (@Red_Pill_US) July 22, 2025 For over a century, the Rothschilds, a Jewish banking dynasty that began in 18th-century Frankfurt, quietly helped lay the economic, political, and physical foundations of the state of Israel. Land purchases in Ottoman Palestine to the construction of Israel's Supreme Court, the Rothschilds shaped a nation before it had a name. The story begins with Mayer Amschel Rothschild (1744-1812), a coin dealer and banker who laid the foundations of Europe's most powerful financial family. His five sons fanned out across London, Paris, Vienna, Naples, and Frankfurt, forming a pan-European banking empire that would fund monarchies, infrastructure, and wars. Lord Rothschild spoke in Parliament only twice: once to discuss the establishment of the state of Israel and once to advocate for milk pasteurization. Let that sink in. "Control the food, control the people." — Red Pill USA (@Red_Pill_US) July 21, 2025 But it was in Palestine that the family carried out their most enduring social experiment. Long before David Ben-Gurion proclaimed the establishment of the state of Israel, Baron Edmond James de Rothschild (1845-1934) became its unsung architect. Between the 1880s and 1920s, Edmond channelled funds into what was then Ottoman-controlled land. He financed agricultural colonies, bought land from the Ottoman Empire, funded Hebrew schools, and built wineries that still bottle wine today. Most of you aren't ready for this rabbit hole. — illuminatibot (@iluminatibot) July 21, 2025 Agricultural colonies like Rishon LeZion, Zikhron Ya'akov, and Rosh Pina sprang to life under his patronage. He funded the draining of malarial swamps, the cultivation of vineyards, and the construction of schools that taught Hebrew to a new generation. To early settlers, he was HaNadiv HaYadu'a, "The Known Benefactor." When he died, he was given a state funeral in Israel, decades before it officially existed. If Edmond was the builder, Lionel Walter Rothschild (1868-1937) was the broker. A British aristocrat, scientist, and president of the English Zionist Federation, he became the formal recipient of the 1917 Balfour Declaration, the British letter pledging support for a Jewish homeland in Palestine. He served as President of the English Zionist Federation. The legacy passed next to James Armand de Rothschild and his wife Dorothy. He donated 1.25 million pounds for the construction of the Knesset, Israel's Parliament building. After his death, Dorothy financed the Supreme Court. The most recent and arguably most vocal Rothschild to steward this legacy was Lord Jacob Rothschild (1936-2024), the 4th Baron and Victor's son. A financier, philanthropist, and cultural patron, Jacob chaired the Yad Hanadiv Foundation, which continues to support major projects in Israel. Under his leadership, the Foundation helped fund Israel's New National Library in Jerusalem. Not every Rothschild was a committed Zionist. Archival records suggest that Victor Rothschild, despite his parliamentary support, opposed certain humanitarian appeals on behalf of Jewish refugees before World War II.

Shoemakers must get ISI mark by Oct: BIS
Shoemakers must get ISI mark by Oct: BIS

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Shoemakers must get ISI mark by Oct: BIS

Kolkata: All local shoe manufacturers will have to register with the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) by Oct. BIS officials informed shoe manufacturers from Tiljala, Topsia, Bantala and Bolarighat at a meeting in the city on Wednesday. Centre had on Dec 31 last year told shoemakers to have an ISI mark on their products. So far, 50 manufacturers from the state have registered themselves with BIS, said BIS joint director and scientist Mainak Gantait."In the next three months, all footwear products sold in the market will need to get the ISI mark," he said. BIS is also offering incentives for MSMEs to get the ISI mark. "Micro enterprises get an 80% rebate in the marking fee. The rebates for small and medium enterprises are 50% and 20% respectively. We are also giving additional incentives to women entrepreneurs," Gantait said. You Can Also Check: Kolkata AQI | Weather in Kolkata | Bank Holidays in Kolkata | Public Holidays in Kolkata

Nashik civic body gets state's nod for 227cr sewage project
Nashik civic body gets state's nod for 227cr sewage project

Time of India

time2 hours ago

  • Time of India

Nashik civic body gets state's nod for 227cr sewage project

Nashik: The civic body received state govt's nod to begin works for a Rs227 crore sewage project at a state-level meeting in Mumbai on Monday. The state-level technical committee gave its approval to the sewage project of Nashik Municipal Corporation (NMC) under which sewerage lines with a total length of 80km are to be laid down in different parts of the city. The project will be funded under central govt's Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation (AMRUT) scheme. While state govt will provide 25% of the total funds, Centre too will contribute 25%. NMC will spend the remaining 50% of the project cost on its own. Superintending Engineer (Water & Sewage Management) of NMC Ravindra Dharanakar said: "Now we will prepare the tender document for the project, which will be sent again to state govt for approval. After this, we will float the tender for the project. This will take around a couple of months." The sewerage lines are to be laid in all six divisions of NMC. Some of the existing old sewerage lines will be replaced with new ones.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store