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Regular-article-logo Thursday, 25 April 2024

Craving for mutton? It’s acting pricey

Non-veg item rates go north as transport takes a beating

Praduman Choubey Dhanbad Published 15.04.20, 08:55 PM
A shop selling chicken at Hirapur Hatia in Dhanbad on Wednesday.

A shop selling chicken at Hirapur Hatia in Dhanbad on Wednesday. Picture by Shabbir Hussain

More than a week after shops selling chicken, eggs and mutton re-opened, coal town residents are compelled to purchase the non-vegetarian “essentials” at way higher prices.

Reason: transportation problems continue, and the administration has allowed only shops with valid licences to stay open.

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The gravity of the price spike can be ascertained from the fact that local fish, available in the market at Rs 200/kg before the lockdown, is now sold at Rs 350 or 400/kg. Chicken that was sold at Rs 80/kg before the lockdown is now sold at Rs 150/kg, while eggs which were being sold at Rs 120 a tray (30 pieces) prior the lockdown, are now sold at Rs 160 a tray. Mutton which was sold at Rs 580/kg, is now being sold at Rs 650/kg.

Sanjay Kumar, a resident of Barmasia in Dhanbad, said: “Though egg, fish, chicken and mutton are available, quantity has reduced because very few shops are selling them, making it difficult for people like us who consider non-vegetarian items an essential.”

Somik Banerjee, a dog-breeder in Hirapur, said: “I need fish and chicken regularly for my dogs but because of high prices we are facing a lot of difficulty. We request the administration to take urgent steps to ensure smooth transport of consignments bringing fish from Andhra Pradesh to Jharkhand so that fish-sellers don’t charge exorbitant prices citing transport difficulties.”

Bapi Modak, a fish-seller at Hirapur Hatia, said: “We are selling fish which are coming from Andhra Pradesh at Rs 250 to 300/kg, but local fish are being sold at Rs 350 to Rs 400/kg because quantity is less. Local fishermen are facing difficulty in transporting their catch from the water bodies to the market because of the lockdown.”

Another fish-seller asked: “How can we sell fish at low rates when we are buying them (from fishermen or from wholesale dealers) at higher prices?”

Shops selling non-vegetarian items in Dhanbad were shut after the Janata Curfew was imposed on March 22, followed by the 21-day lockdown. They reopened on April 7 only after the animal husbandry department wrote to the district administrations that selling of non-vegetarian items is not prohibited during the lockdown.

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