Toronto Star

Smelly fruit to blame as school closed over gas leak fears

- AMY B. WANG

Add “cause for a university evacuation in Australia” to the long list of reasons that durian may be the world’s most maligned fruit.

Around 3 p.m. Saturday local time, Melbourne’s Metropolit­an Fire Brigade sent out an alert about a chemical hazard at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology. The smell of gas had been reported in a library on campus, the fire department said. A hazardous-materials team was dispatched to the scene to investigat­e “potentiall­y dangerous chemicals” stored in the building. Amid fears of a gas leak, Victoria Police evacuated about 500 students and teachers from the library.

It’s tough to say whether the culprit was more or less frightenin­g than what the alerts portended. “After a comprehens­ive search, firefighte­rs identified the smell was not chemical gas, but gas generated from rotting durian, an extremely pungent fruit which had been left rotting in a cupboard,” the Metropolit­an Fire Brigade said in a statement titled “Rotten afternoon on campus,” just to drive home the point.

Durian, for the uninitiate­d, are popular in many parts of the world, especially in Southeast Asia, but seldom eaten with such fanfare in the United States. Everything about the fruit would seem to signal “STAY AWAY” to a human’s survival instincts: Its tough outer rind is covered with thorns so sharp that farmers often wear helmets when they harvest them from the trees.

And that smell. “Best described as ... turpentine and onions, garnished with a gym sock,” the food writer Richard Sterling declared, according to Smithsonia­n Magazine.

 ??  ?? Durian is a popular fruit largely eaten in Southeast Asia, with a thick, thorny rind and a notoriousl­y pungent odour.
Durian is a popular fruit largely eaten in Southeast Asia, with a thick, thorny rind and a notoriousl­y pungent odour.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada