A Cambodian
woman decants rice wine into a water bottle for sale in Phnom Penh
|
Rice wine brewed with a
toxic level of alcohol has killed at least 19 people and left 172 more in
hospital in northeast Cambodia, the health ministry said Sunday.
"Laboratory
tests found the deaths were caused by the high methanol level in the
wine," Ly Sovann, a spokesman for the health ministry, told AFP.
Local
authorities in Kratie province, where residents have been falling ill since
November 19 after drinking the tainted alcohol, have ordered all local brewers
and rice wine sellers to close temporarily.
AFP report continues:
Tests
carried out by the Ministry of Health have found that some of the wine involved
in at least five separate incidents contained up to 12 percent methanol -- the
usual level is around 0.15 percent.
Local
media reported that some of the 172 people hospitalized had suffered vomiting
and dizziness.
Authorities
are investigating the incidents, the Ministry of Health said Sunday in a
statement, but no arrests have been made so far.
Health
Minister Mam Bunheng said in the statement that people should immediately stop
drinking rice or herbal wine that had been produced without proper inspection
or permits from authorities.
The
ministry said it was working with international partners including the World
Health Organization to strengthen food safety in the country.
Six
of the deaths had been previously announced as being caused by rotten dog meat,
but the ministry said further tests had shown that the wine was the cause of
the poisoning.
Cambodians
often drink locally brewed rice wine, which is relatively inexpensive but can
be dangerous if not mixed properly.
Deaths
from bad batches of rice wine are reasonably common -- although deaths on this
scale are rare.
In
2010 at least 17 Cambodians died in the eastern province of Kampong Cham after
drinking rice wine out of a bottle previously used for weedkiller.
The
year after that, at least nine Cambodians died and 76 were hospitalized after
drinking tainted wine at a funeral ceremony.
Impoverished
Cambodia is notorious for lax health and safety standards and cases of mass
food poisoning are also reasonably common.
Earlier
this year more than 600 Cambodian villagers, mostly schoolchildren, fell ill
after eating contaminated food provided to a school during an event staged as
part of a campaign against child labour.
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