A Chinese restaurant laced their customers meals with
opium as a way to 'keeping customers coming back for more'
|
Two managers of
a central China restaurant have been arrested on the suspicion of adding opium
to dishes.
State news agency Xinhua quoted a police investigation
as saying Friday that a major motivation for the Hubei Province establishment
was "keeping customers coming back for more."
In routine tests, the local food and drug
administration said they had detected main ingredients of poppy seeds -
including papaverine and narcotine - in the restaurant's dishes in March.
Poppy seeds contain the analgesic alkaloid morphine, a
narcotic used to treat severe pain that is processed chemically to produce
heroin.
Morphine was famously used by Victorian literary
figure Sherlock Holmes to escape from “the dull routine of existence.”
Doctors say long-term consumption can lead to
addiction, damage to the nervous system and induce chronic intoxication.
Police
said that the two managers had said that they added the poppy seeds to
dressings for the purpose of improving the taste of their dishes while keeping
customers coming back for more.
Source:
World Bulletin
/ News Desk
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