Advertising watchdog ASCI pulls up Patanjali, HUL, others for misleading campaigns
It upheld 10 complaints against Patanjali Ayurved for products such as Jeera Biscuit, Kacchi Ghani mustard oil, Kesh Kanti and Dant Kanti.
New Delhi: Advertising watchdog ASCI has pulled up Patanjali Ayurved, HUL, PepsiCo, Britannia, Pizza Hut, Amazon, LG Electronics, Voltas, Axis Bank, AirAsia and Flipkart, among others, for running misleading ad campaigns.
The Customer Complaints Council of Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI) received 155 complaints in May, out of which it upheld 109 cases, it said in a statement.
It upheld 10 complaints against yoga guru Baba Ramdev-promoted Patanjali Ayurved for products such as Jeera Biscuit, Kacchi Ghani mustard oil, Kesh Kanti and Dant Kanti, among others. The advertising regulator had earlier upheld six cases against Patanjali in April and March 2016.
Patanjali Ayurved failed to substantiate its claim before the regulator regarding ads for products such as Divya Swasari Pravahi, Dant Kanti, Kesh Kanti and CCC upheld them "as misleading by exaggeration".
Queries sent to HUL and Pepsi did not elicit any response. However, Patanjali questioned the manner in which the decisions were passed and alleged that some rival MNCs are behind the move.
"They cannot pass any judgment against the non-members. There are several judgments against them (ASCI). Its order is not binding on any non-member," a company spokesperson said, adding that it is exploring legal options in this matter.
"Moreover, they do not have any expert on ayurveda and life sciences and are deciding the matter. They do not have any fact finding procedure or a laboratory and decide the case in a meeting only," he added.
ASCI also pulled up beverage major PepsiCo India for its campaign 'Har Bottle par Paytm Cash pakka' as it was "misleading and luring the consumers to buy Pepsi bottles, with a minimum hope of getting some cash back through Paytm."
"The advertisement itself does not clarify the main condition for the offer of it being mobile number specific. Also, the disclaimers in the advertisement were not in the same language as that of the voice over," it said.
Britannia Industries' claim of "100 per cent whole wheat bread" was found "misleading by ambiguity as the whole wheat content in the product (Whole Wheat Bread) is in the range of 50 per cent to 65 per cent and other solid content in the product is coming from other sources."
Yum! Restaurants, which runs the Pizza Hut chain, was pulled up for its advertisement on 'Any Pizza Any Size @ 199 each when you buy 2 Pizzas' as "misleading by omission".
Tata Group firm Voltas' ad campaign claiming to run 'two air-conditioners at the cost of one' was found "misleading by omission of disclaimers giving reference to the comparison being made between a Voltas All Star Inverter AC and a conventional start-stop AC".