Headmistress ignored cook’s concerns over poisoned food, Indian police say
NEW DELHI — The headmistress of an Indian school where 23 pupils died after eating a free lunch contaminated with pesticides forced a cook to ignore complaints and serve the suspect food, police have claimed.
Shortly after her instruction, the cook collapsed and, 90 minutes later, the first victim, four-year-old Anshu Kumar, died on his way to hospital.
Investigators believe that the mustard oil used in cooking the meal had been contaminated with poisonous organophosphate pesticides.
The scale of the tragedy provoked violent protests from parents and relations in Chappra, Bihar, one of India’s poorest states, and anger throughout the country. Several parents buried the bodies of their children in front of the school in protest Thursday.
“We decided to bury our children in front of the school building to remind the government that they died because of their negligence,” said Madav Ram, whose 12-year-old son Rahul was among the victims. “We also plan to raise a memorial in the memory of the dead children inside the school.”
The Midday Meal Scheme is the world’s largest and serves free lunches to 120 million schoolchildren throughout India. Many parents send their children to school primarily for the free meal, but there have been widespread complaints of substandard and rotten food.
District magistrate Abhishek Sinha said he believed many of the children who ate the meal at Dharmashati-Gandamanprimary school on Tuesday may have been saved had the headmistress, who is now on the run, tasted the food before it was served, as required under the scheme’s rules.