
The skyrocketing prices have been particularly hard on India's middle and lower classes, who make up the bulk of the population.
McDonald's
recently made news - not for adding a new dish - but dropping tomatoes from its
menu in most of its outlets in northern and eastern India. It cited the
unavailability of quality tomatoes "due to seasonal crop issues" as
the reason.
According
to report, the conundrum over the tomato in India right now is not whether it's
a fruit or a vegetable - it's that it has become expensive, and ridiculously
so.
The price
of the everyday staple has been climbing steeply for the past couple of weeks,
and now stands at almost 200 rupees (£2; $3) a kilo in certain parts of India -
a sharp shift from the usual 40-50 rupees.
The costly
tomato has wreaked havoc on wallets, in kitchens and even on the streets.
In the
western city of Pune, a vegetable seller allegedly smacked a customer in the
face with a weighing scale for bickering over the price of 250g of tomatoes.
In India's
holiest city Varanasi, a politician reportedly hired two bouncers to prevent
people from haggling over tomato prices at his shop.
There have
been reports of people stealing tomatoes from fields and hijacking tomato-laden
trucks.
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