IT conducts searches in Delhi, NCR to detect onion hoarding

January 10, 2011 03:44 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 03:35 am IST - New Delhi

Wholesale onion trader seen sorting onions at Azadpur Sabzi Mandi in New Delhi. File Photo: Sushil Kumar Verma

Wholesale onion trader seen sorting onions at Azadpur Sabzi Mandi in New Delhi. File Photo: Sushil Kumar Verma

The Income Tax department on Monday surveyed business premises of big onion and vegetable traders including at Azadpur wholesale market here to detect hoarding and illegal profiteering.

IT sources said the officials of the department began an early morning operation of checking and obtaining the account books and ledgers of large wholesale onion traders based in Delhi and NCR.

The department’s action was to crackdown on hoarding and over-valuation of onion stocks, they said.

The IT department had last week conducted similar survey operations in Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra and few other states.

Meanwhile, traders in Maharashtra’s Nashik and adjoining onion-growing areas on Monday went on two-day strike against IT raids and disrupted supply to traders from other states who are being forced to sell the vegetable at “below the cost price“.

Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee had earlier said IT raids in the premises of different traders have also helped in reducing onion prices.

There has been a “dip in onion prices in some states after IT search,” he had said.

The retail price of onion has started easing but still it continued to rule high at Rs 55-60/kg in metros after nationwide raids and increased supply from growing states.

Food inflation has crossed over 18 per cent for the week ended December 25 due to high rates of onion and other items.

Due to crop damage in key growing states, the country’s total onion production is expected to decline by 12.5 per cent to 10.5 million tonnes this year against 12 million tonnes in 2009-10, according to research body NHRDF.

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