ADVERTISEMENT

Kitchen to serve ₹5-a-meal to attendants in govt. hospitals opened

June 27, 2022 11:51 pm | Updated June 28, 2022 08:18 am IST - HYDERABAD

Subsidised meals being provided in collaboration with Hare Krishna Foundation

Health Minister T. Harish Rao at the Hare Krishna Movement Charitable Foundation’s centralised kitchen that will provide food under ₹5 meals scheme. | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

Health Minister T. Harish Rao on Monday inaugurated the Hare Krishna Movement Charitable Foundation’s (HKMCF) ‘centralised kitchen’ at Narsingi which has been set up to cater to the government’s ₹5-a-meal for patient attendants at 18 designated State-run hospitals across the twin cities.

HKMCF is the executing partner for the scheme and the new facility can serve upto 10,000 persons daily. It has been built with the sponsorship of ₹2.5 crore from patrons — Vattam Ramesh Babu and Pradeep Gopal Agarwal and their families. Breakfast, lunch and dinner each costs ₹5.

HKMCF-Telangana president Satya Gaura Chandra Dasa was present at the inauguration.

The foundation has been providing free food at hospitals and market yards in partnership with donors, apart from providing subsidised food to the needy in collaboration with government bodies, through its centralised community kitchens under programmes like Bhojana-Amritam, Saddimoota and Annapurna (₹5 meal programme in partnership with GHMC and other municipalities), which feeds about 65,000 mouths every day.

ADVERTISEMENT

It has served cumulative meals of about 13 crore, over the past 10 years. MLAs T. Prakash Goud and Koppula Mahesh Reddy, MLC Boggarapu Dayanand, TSMSIDC managing director Chandrasekhar Reddy, Rangareddy Zilla Parishad chairperson Anitha Reddy and municipal chairperson Rekha Yadhagiri also participated in the programme, said a press release.

This is a Premium article available exclusively to our subscribers. To read 250+ such premium articles every month
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
The Hindu operates by its editorial values to provide you quality journalism.
This is your last free article.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT