Los Angeles Times

Food sickens 800 at Iraq camp

U.N. reports one died. A supervisor says the meal had been sitting in vehicles for more than three hours.

- By Nabih Bulos Bulos is a special correspond­ent. Twitter: @nabihbulos

HASSAN SHAM CAMP, Iraq — When Harbiyah Ahmad Nejem was presented with the hot plate of rice, chicken and bean stew, she saw it as a treat for her iftar, the daily breaking of the fast during the month of Ramadan.

The moment the muezzin’s evening call to prayer could be heard, the 47-yearold from the Iraqi city of Mosul, now a resident of the Hassan Sham U2 displaced persons camp, began to eat.

“I immediatel­y felt bad the moment I ate it,” she said. She soon began to vomit. She wasn’t the only one. “Everyone in the camp began to shout, ‘tasamum, tasamum,’ ” or poisoning, Nejem said.

At least one person died in the mass food poisoning that affected more than 800 people at the camp near Mosul, causing acute vomiting and diarrhea, according to the United Nations. Aid officials sent about 600 people to surroundin­g hospitals.

A statement released earlier Tuesday by the Office of the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees said the organizati­on was “extremely concerned by events at the camp.”

“Staff have been working closely overnight to coordinate the response with other agencies and the relevant authoritie­s in the Kurdistan region of Iraq and Baghdad to ensure that those who have fallen ill were able to receive swift medical treatment and that the seriously sick were provided transport to nearby hospitals,” the U.N.’s refugee agency said.

Hassan Sham has taken in about 6,235 people who f led Mosul, now the focus of a fierce campaign to oust Islamic State from its bastion in the city.

The U.N. said that at least one child had died and that a woman was in critical condition.

But Razgar Ubeid, the supervisor of the camps housing Mosul’s displaced, said that there had been no casualties among the 825 people affected.

“In any case, it was a disaster, and the police are now investigat­ing the situation,” Ubeid, who works for the Barzani Charity Foundation, said in an interview at the camp.

He said the money for the food had been donated by a Qatari charitable organizati­on, the Sheikh Thani Bin Abdullah Foundation for Humanitari­an Services, known as RAF. The meals had been prepared by a restaurant in Irbil, the capital of the Kurdish region, roughly 30 miles east of the camp.

“It seems the food had stayed for more than three hours in the transport vehicles by the time it was distribute­d,” said Ubeid.

Khaled Ghanem Mashaadeh, a father of five, pointed with barely disguised relief at his 6-year-old daughter, Yasseh, who was standing shyly by his side.

“I just got back from the hospital in Irbil. Yasseh had white froth coming out of her mouth,” he said in an interview at the camp.

“My two other boys are still recovering. They’re sleeping in the tent.”

Local news outlet Rudaw reported that the restaurant owner had been arrested.

Ubeid explained that the camp had facilities for residents to prepare food on their own and that administra­tors had previously placed an injunction on aid organizati­ons bringing meals prepared outside.

“But,” he said, “organizati­ons complained we weren’t letting them distribute the charity they wanted to give. They wanted to make a special occasion, so we allowed it. “It’s now absolutely banned to bring meals like this. It’s better to donate money or give refugees frozen food or rations to prepare themselves.”

By Tuesday afternoon, almost all of the affected people had returned to Hassan Sham and the situation was “under control,” UNHCR spokeswoma­n Caroline Gluck said in a phone interview Tuesday.

But that did not prevent Saudi Arabian media from portraying the incident as an example of malfeasanc­e by Qatar.

The two countries have been locked in an escalating diplomatic clash in recent weeks, and commentato­rs on television channels and newspapers in Saudi Arabia and other gulf countries have worked overtime to depict Qatar as a dangerous upstart that must be put in its place.

On Tuesday, Saudi stateowned television channel Ekhbariya posted images on its Twitter account showing sick children it said were from the Hassan Sham camp.

“They were poisoned by the terrorist Qatari ‘RAF’ organizati­on with Iftar Ramadan meals,” said the tweet.

The RAF organizati­on did not immediatel­y comment.

 ?? Balint Szlanko Associated Press ?? A MAN holds his daughter as a doctor treats her after she became ill from a dinner at the Hassan Sham camp for the displaced in Iraq.
Balint Szlanko Associated Press A MAN holds his daughter as a doctor treats her after she became ill from a dinner at the Hassan Sham camp for the displaced in Iraq.

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