Yorkshire Post

Firm hits out at ‘unfounded’ Pret claims after second allergy death

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THE FIRM blamed by Pret A Manger for supplying a contaminat­ed yoghurt suspected to have caused a second allergy death has called the chain’s claims “unfounded”.

Pret said the patron died after eating a “super-veg rainbow flatbread” containing a yoghurt that was supposed to be dairy-free, but was found to be contaminat­ed with dairy.

The Food Standards Agency (FSA) said it investigat­ed supplier CoYo, which then issued an allergy alert and recalled its coconut yoghurts. But CoYo has denied the recall was linked to the woman’s death and accused Pret of hampering its own probe by failing to provide vital informatio­n.

“The claims made by Pret are unfounded,” a spokeswoma­n for CoYo said yesterday.

The latest death emerged as Pret was facing scrutiny over 15-year-old Natasha Ednan-Laperouse, who was allergic to sesame and died after eating one of its baguettes.

The second customer collapsed and died on December 27 after buying the sandwich in a store in Stall Street, Bath.

Pret said it had been “mis-sold” a guaranteed dairy-free yoghurt by CoYo that was discovered to contain dairy protein. Vegan brand CoYo, a coconut milk brand that has been endorsed by TV cook Nigella Lawson, recalled the yoghurts in February.

But yesterday, CoYo denied this was related, saying that product was supplied to it in January – after the woman’s death.

“The dairy-free product we provided to Pret in December 2017, at the time of this tragedy, is not linked to the product we recalled in February 2018,” a spokeswoma­n said.

Bath’s council alerted Pret to the incident and the chain said it then withdrew all affected products, ended its CoYo contract and launched legal action. Pret announced on Wednesday it will include full ingredient labelling on all of its products and the Government is considerin­g a law change after the death of Natasha, from Fulham, south-west London.

She collapsed on board a flight in July 2016 after eating an artichoke, olive and tapenade baguette she had bought in Heathrow Airport. Natasha’s parents, Nadim and Tanya Ednan-Laperouse, have since campaigned for allergy awareness and a change into food labelling laws.

A coroner is investigat­ing the second woman’s death.

 ??  ?? NATASHA EDNAN-LAPEROUSE: The teenager’s parents have called for a change in food labelling laws.
NATASHA EDNAN-LAPEROUSE: The teenager’s parents have called for a change in food labelling laws.

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