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Bournvita row | FSSAI needs an energy shot to regulate processed food – The Hindu

The social media influencer drawn into the Cadbury Bournvita controversy, has a supporter. The Nutrition Advocacy in Public Interest India (NAPi), a think tank working on nutrition policy, has issued a statement saying they stand by him.

Revant Himatsingka, who calls himself @foodpharmer on social media, with 1,35,000 followers on Instagram, drew the ire of Mondelez India, the company that owns Bournvita, with his April 1 video in which he had flagged the products high sugar content. He, however, deleted the video following a legal notice from the company on April 13. He has also apologised on his Instagram handle, while his Twitter handle has been suspended.

Bournvita, the 75-year-old brand, calls itself a chocolate health drink on its Instagram page with 4,43,000.

In January, NAPi had said that a Bournvita advertisement and product packaging was misleading and did not disclose the sugar content. The organisation has filed a formal complaint with the Department of Consumers Affairs, working under the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food & Public Distribution. It alleges the ads violate the provision of the Consumer Protection Act, 2019.

However, this has brought to a boil the real issue at hand the Food Standards and Safety Authority of India (FSSAI) dragging its feet over implementing its own guidelines to regulate packaged and processed food.

FSSAI has been discussing the possibility of front-of-pack labelling. According to this, brands would need to put a notification indicating if a food product was high in fat, sugar, and salt (HFSS). The labelling would allow consumers to make informed choices.

In September 2022, the statutory body had issued a draft notification on front-of-package labelling that proposed Indian Nutrition Rating. The health star-rating system for packaged foods will assign 1/2 a star (least healthy) to five stars (healthiest) depending on the ingredients and the degree of processing.

This, despite massive opposition from doctors and the governments own bodies such as the Indian Council of Medical Research and National Institute of Nutrition. Often ultra-processed foods (UPFs) are made to look healthy by adding some vitamins and minerals. That doesnt really work well for human health, said an expert, adding that the negatives of UPFs could outweigh the positives from the added vitamins and minerals.

Dr. Arun Gupta, paediatrician and NAPi convener, said the FSSAI has not been at the forefront of implementing its own regulations. Stars are a method to reward, and they should not be used. An upfront warning that a product is high in sugar content is required, he said.

In the past, easier ways of identifying healthy, relatively healthy, and unhealthy foods have been under consideration. One was the green-amber-red way, which was easy for even a young child to understand.

While ingredients in Bournvita can be found mentioned on the back of the product, the company, in a statement, said Bournvita is best consumed with a glass of 200 ml of hot or cold milk as highlighted on the pack.

Every serving of 20 gm of Bournvita has 7.5 gm of added sugar, which is approximately one-and-a-half teaspoons. This is much less than the daily recommended intake limits of sugar for children, said Mondelez India.

The World Health Organization in its nutrient profile model for the Southeast Asia region recommends prohibition of marketing in the category of milk and dairy-based drinks if the total sugar content of the product exceeds 7 gm per 100 gm.

According to FSSAIs Advertising and Claims Regulations, 2018, any product which has 5 gm of sugar per 100 gm can be categorised as low sugar.

In 2020, FSSAI had looked into 1,306 product samples across 30 food companies, including dairy, confectionery, sweets, snacks and more. None complied with its threshold for sugar to avoid warning labels 6 gm per 100 gm. A panel then proposed increasing the threshold arbitrarily by six times. Despite that, only 20% of products were found to be meeting the new threshold 36 gm of sugar per 100 gm. The rest had over 36 gm of sugar, a source in the technical expert committee constituted by FSSAI told The Hindu.

The panel was then dissolved and another committee formed to propose whether warning labels or health star ratings should be given in front-of-the-pack labelling, the source said.

Dr. Gupta says that FSSAI has not been at the forefront of implementing its own regulation. It works on a system of complaints and at times hearings drag on for years, he said.

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Bournvita row | FSSAI needs an energy shot to regulate processed food - The Hindu

TikTok given government advertising green light despite device ban – The Australian Financial Review

While TikTok may offer an environment to speak to a hard-to-reach audience from an advertising perspective, brand safety is an issue where TikTok has not yet applied all technology safeguards possible to protect advertisers, UM wrote in March 2021.

But last July, UM reversed its recommendation, saying TikTok had started working with technology company Integral Ad Science (IAS), which analyses a pool of curated videos and sends safe videos back to TikTok to add to an advertising campaign before it is launched.

Trialling in-feed ads for graduate hiring campaigns or Defence Force Recruiting would be a good place to start, UM said.

It is recommended to trial TikTok on a suitable campaign of this nature before considering broader application, UMs revised appraisal said.

But TikTok was ultimately deemed inappropriate for Defence Force recruiting.

Defence does not currently advertise on TikTok, a spokeswoman said. Defence will not use TikTok as an advertising medium as part of the 2023-24 Defence Force recruiting media strategy.

Earlier this year, UM proposed two pilot TikTok campaigns for the Australian Taxation Office, one about superannuation and the other about graduate recruitment. They were approved by the Department of Finance but also did not proceed.

An ATO spokeswoman confirmed the tax office ran a superannuation education campaign for a month until April 16, but had used previously successful channels.

UM also proposed pilot TikTok campaigns for the upcoming Voice referendum, which had not yet been approved by the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC).

An AEC spokesman said the body had not used TikTok in any advertising campaign to date.

We are aware of broader government considerations regarding the use of TikTok as a channel and this will be a key factor in a final decision regarding AEC advertising, he said.

One trial that was approved was for Australian Eggs, which finished on March 31. Australian Eggs promotes eggs and is funded by statutory levies and the Australian government for research and development.

Australian Eggs managing director Rowan McMonnies said the organisation differed from government agencies that hold sensitive information. Australian Eggs doesnt hold any national security information, so the relevant risk doesnt arise, he said.

The government hasnt banned TikTok and millions of Australians continue to use it. If it became apparent that TikTok could adversely impact the reputation of Australian Eggs or Australian Egg farmers then we would immediately reconsider using it as a media platform.

The organisations campaign on TikTok was a success, he added.

A TikTok spokeswoman confirmed the social media platform had worked alongside health departments and the AEC in the past.

A wide range of brands and advertisers, both big and small, find great success working with TikTok and connecting with our millions of users, she said.

This includes successful information campaigns run in collaboration with Health Departments regarding COVID-19 and the Australian Electoral Commission around elections. We look forward to working with government entities in the future to help them reach new audiences.

The Department of Finance told the Financial Review TikTok may be trialled for campaigns where deemed suitable.

In April, Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus issued a directive banning TikTok on government-issued devices based on advice from intelligence and security agencies.

However, the directive included caveats for legitimate business reasons to have the app, including: where an entity must use the application to reach key audiences to undertake marketing or public relations activity on behalf of the entity.

James Paterson, the newly appointed opposition spokesman for Home Affairs and Cyber Security, called for a consistent approach across government agencies and departments.

UM told the Financial Review it regularly reviews and updates its advice to government on a range of media and social media platforms.

Over time, UM has communicated the improvements to brand safety made by TikTok most notably integration with Integral Ad Science to pre-vet video content and advised government the platform should be considered for trial for any campaigns deemed suitable, it said.

Given how rapidly the media landscape changes and the prevalence for new and unforeseen brand safety issues to arise, UMs advice to all advertisers is constantly under review.

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TikTok given government advertising green light despite device ban - The Australian Financial Review

Ex-Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg released from jail – NBC News

Former Trump Organization chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg was released from jail on Wednesday, according to New York City Department of Correction records.

Weisselberg was sent to New Yorks Rikers Island jail on January 10 for helping engineer a wide-ranging 15-year tax fraud scheme at former president Donald Trumps family business.

He was sentenced to five months behind bars but was eligible for release after 100 days with time off for good behavior.

Weisselberg, 75, pleaded guilty last year in connection with the long-running scheme. He and other executives received bonuses and perks in ways that cheated tax authorities and saved the company money. He evaded taxes on $1.76 million of income.

As part of his plea deal, Weisselberg testified at last years trial of the Trump Organization, which also was charged with the tax fraud scheme. The company was found guilty and fined $1.6 million, the maximum allowed.

A lawyer for Weisselberg did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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Ex-Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg released from jail - NBC News

Trump criminal defense attorney in Alvin Bragg crosshairs over possible conflict of interest – Fox News

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg wants to know if former President Trump's principal lawyer has a conflict of interest involving Stormy Daniels through her prior consultationwithhis firm.

In an April 14 letter to the judge handling Trump's criminal proceeding, Assistant District Attorney Susan Hoffinger requested more information about lawyer Joe Tacopina'spreviouscorrespondence with the porn starlet.

Tacopina has acknowledged that Daniels reached out to his firm for possible representation in her long-standing tussle with Trump back in 2018, before she retained media-darling-turned-felon Michael Avenatti.

In a CNN interview that year, host Don Lemon quizzed Tacopina about Daniels' entanglements with Trump given his office's contact with her.

DONALD TRUMP'S NYC CASE MAY BE HEADED IN ONLY ONE DIRECTION, FORMER PROSECUTORS REVEAL

Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg is targeting former President Trump's lawyer Joe Tacopina, right, for removal over his ties to porn star Stormy Daniels, left. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC/via Getty Images)

"Did you get any impression that she may have signed an NDA under duress and was she afraid for her physical safety?" Lemon asked, according to Hoffinger's letter.

"Yes, of course, and I cant really talk about my impressions or any conversations we had because there is an attorney-client privilege that attaches even to a consultation," Tacopina responded.

At Trump's arraignment last month, Tacopina denied personally consulting with Daniels and has said flatly that his firm declined to take on her civil case against the former president.

READ MANHATTAN PROSECUTORS LETTER TO JUDGE MERCHAN QUESTIONING TRUMP LAWYER JOE TACOPINA'S TIES TO STORMY DANIELS

The issue was raised after Daniels' attorney Clark Brewster filed a letter with the court on the eve of Trump's arraignment arguing that Tacopina should be disqualified from the case.

Trump is accused of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records stemming from a $130,000 hush-money payment to the adult film actress.

WHO IS DONALD TRUMP'S LAWYER JOE TACOPINA?

"We refused the case," Tacopina told Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan at Trump's arraignment. "I did not offer her representation. Didnt speak to her. Didnt meet with her. And it is as simple as that."

However, Daniels appeared to reference personal correspondence with Tacopina in her book "Full Disclosure," Manhattan prosecutors noted in their letter.

Stormy Daniels, left, says former President Trump's attorney, Joe Tacopina, should be disqualified as his lawyer since she consulted with his law firm. (Phillip Faraone/Getty Images/Photo by Seth Wenig-Pool/Getty Images)

"She writes that before retaining Mr. Avenatti, she spoke with a very high-powered lawyer who seemed to take her call just for the curiosity factor, dragged it out for a couple of weeks and didnt seem to share her passion, so she ended it," the letter states. "She wrote that she was anxious that this guy now knew my story and my strategy for confronting Cohen and Trump.'"

Manhattan prosecutors now want Merchan to order Tacopina to turn over all correspondence his firm had with Daniels and to "disclose any steps he has taken to alleviate this potential conflict."

In his own April 12 filing to the court, Tacopina blasted Daniels' letter on the eve of Trump's historic arraignment as an "obvious publicity stunt," noting that the missive, authored by an attorney who is not licensed to practice law in New York, was promptly released to the press.

READ JOE TACOPINA'S LETTER DENYING A CONFLICT OF INTERESTING INVOLVING STORM DANIELS

In her consultation with Tacopina's firm, the subject exclusively focused on whether her non-disclosure agreement with Trump was enforceable, the details of which she has widely discussed in a flurry of media interviews, her own book and civil lawsuits, according to his letter.

TRUMP SLAMS NYAG JAMES' 'RIDICULOUS' CASE, SAYS SHE SHOULD 'FOCUS ON PEOPLE WHO KILL PEOPLE' AS CRIME SPIKES

Trump is accused of falsifying internal business records when he had his former lawyer, Michael Cohen, arrange the $130,000 hush-money payment to Daniels during his 2016 presidential campaign to keep her quiet about an alleged sexual encounter. He has denied the affair.

Trump eventually paid Cohen back a total of $420,000, and Bragg asserts that the payments were improperly categorized as legal expenses and implied the arrangement violated campaign and tax laws.

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The 2024 Republican presidential candidate has dismissed the case as a manufactured and politically-motivated witch hunt with no legal merit.

Emmett Jones contributed to this report.

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Trump criminal defense attorney in Alvin Bragg crosshairs over possible conflict of interest - Fox News

House GOP and Bragg lawyers to face off in court over Trump probe – NBC News

A former prosecutor for the Manhattan district attorney's office must appear for a deposition before the House Judiciary Committee, despite the DA's contention that House Republicans are trying to interfere with his investigation into former President Donald Trump.

In a ruling late Wednesday afternoon, U.S. District Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil sided with the arguments presented by the Rep. Jim Jordan-led committee that the panel's subpoena of former prosecutor Mark Pomerantz was lawful and proper.

"The subpoena was issued with a 'valid legislative purpose' in connection with the 'broad' and 'indispensable' congressional power to 'conduct investigations," wrote the judge, who was a Trump nominee. "Mr. Pomerantz must appear for the congressional deposition. No one is above the law."

Bragg filed suit last week in federal court in Manhattan against the committee and Jordan, R-Ohio, charging that theyre improperly trying to interfere with his prosecution of Trump for political reasons.

Jordan maintained its Braggs investigation that is politically motivated. His committee subpoenaed Pomerantz, whod been involved with the DAs investigation into Trump, to testify Thursday.

The judge mocked the DA's 50-page suit in her ruling, saying, "The first 35 pages of the Complaint have little to do with the subpoena at issue and are nothing short of a public relations tirade against former President and current presidential candidate Donald Trump."

She also took aim at the DA's contention that the committee was trying to undermine the Trump investigation.

"There is no question that New York, a sovereign state in our federal system, has authority to enforce its criminal laws through its local prosecutors," she wrote. "However, the Court rejects the premise that the Committees investigation will interfere with DANYs ongoing prosecution. The subpoena of Pomerantz, who was a private citizen and public commentator at the time Bragg indicted Trump, will not prevent or impede the criminal prosecution that is proceeding in New York state court."

The judge added she did not care about the political finger-pointing from both sides in the case.

"The Court does not endorse either sides agenda. The sole question before the Court at this time is whether Bragg has a legal basis to quash a congressional subpoena that was issued with a valid legislative purpose. He does not," she wrote in her 25-page ruling.

There was no immediate comment from the DA's office. At a hearing in the case earlier Wednesday, Braggs attorneys indicated that they would ask the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals for a stay if Vyskocil didnt rule in their favor.

The appeal was filed early Wednesday evening.

A spokesman for Jordan, Russell Dye, said the judge's decision shows that Congress has the ability to conduct oversight and issue subpoenas to people like Mark Pomerantz, and we look forward to his deposition before the Judiciary committee.

Jordan had argued that Pomerantzs previous role in the DAs office leading a probe into Trumps finances makes him uniquely situated to provide information that is relevant and necessary to his committees investigation. He's also noted that Pomerantz has already divulged information on the investigationin a book that was published in February, as well as in media interviews.

Bragg's suit sought a court order blocking the subpoena to Pomerantz, calling it an unprecedently brazen and unconstitutional attack on an ongoing investigation.

Congress has no power to supervise state criminal prosecutions, Braggs lawyer, Theodore Boutrous, wrote in the lawsuit.

Jordan, who snubbed a subpoena from the Democratically led House Jan. 6 committee last year, argued he's not trying to interfere with the investigation. He contended that his committee needs the information from Pomerantz, in part, for a "legislative purpose" a bill that would allow state criminal cases against former presidents to be moved to federal court.

Bragg pointed to that proposed legislation as proof that the committee is trying to interfere, because it "would apply to any cases pending at the time of enactment."

"The record confirms the purpose of the subpoena is to advance a plan to intimidate, harass, retaliate, and hold 'accountable' District Attorney Bragg for enforcing New Yorks criminal law against a then-New Yorker, Mr. Trump," the DA argued.

"The Congressional Defendants want the District Attorney an official endowed with the sovereign authority of the State of New York by its laws and its people to bend the knee and to 'explain to us exactly what he is doing.'

Bragg, who had instructed Pomerantz not to respond to the committee's subpoena, also sued Pomerantz to block his testimony, arguing that the interests and privileges of the DA's office must be protected.

Pomerantz filed a declaration in court Monday asking the judge to block the subpoena for his testimony because he's in an "impossible position."

[I]f I refuse to provide information to the Committee, I risk being held in contempt of Congress and referred to the Department of Justice for possible criminal prosecution. If, on the other hand, I defy the District Attorneys instructions and answer questions, I face possible legal or ethical consequences, including criminal prosecution, his filing noted.

Pomerantz, who resigned from Bragg's office in February 2022, also stressed that he was not involved in the decision to seek Donald Trumps indictment on the charges filed against him.

I have had no conversations about prosecuting Mr. Trump with the District Attorney or any member of the prosecution team following my resignation, Pomerantz said.

Jordan held a committee field hearing in Manhattan on Monday to attack Bragg. It featured victims of violent crime to highlight Republicans' argument that Bragg has dropped the ball on keeping the public safe to focus on prosecuting Trump. Braggs office has pointedto new datashowing crime has significantly fallen in Manhattan during his tenure.

The DA's office had been investigating Trump for years, before Bragg took office.

Earlier this month, Bragg charged Trump with 34 felony counts of falsifying business records related to his alleged role in hush money payments toward the end of his 2016 presidential campaign. Trump has pleaded not guilty and called the investigation a partisan "witch hunt."

Vyskocil was nominated by Trump in 2019 and easily confirmed in the Senate by a 91-3 vote.

Chloe Atkins reports for the NBC News Investigative Unit, based in New York.She frequently covers crime and courts, as well as the intersection of reproductive health, politics and policy.

Daniel Barnes reports for NBC News, based in Washington.

Dareh Gregorian is a politics reporter for NBC News.

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House GOP and Bragg lawyers to face off in court over Trump probe - NBC News