The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Company denies rat poison in pills linked to India sterilisat­ion deaths

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RAIPUR, India: The company at the centre of a probe into why more than a dozen women died after being sterilised in India has denied that the antibiotic tablets it manufactur­ed were contaminat­ed with a chemical compound commonly found in rat poison.

Preliminar­y tests of ciprocin tablets made by Mahawar Pharmaceut­icals, a small firm based in Chhattisga­rh state, were found to contain zinc phosphide, two senior officials in the state said on Saturday.

Samples have been sent to Kolkata and Delhi to verify that they were contaminat­ed.

The antibiotic­s were handed out at a mass sterilisat­ion held a week ago at a government-run family planning camp in the state, one of India’s poorest. At least 15 women have died, most of whom had attended the camp.

Mahawar Pharmaceut­icals managing director Ramesh Mahawar denied any wrongdoing and said in a statement released by the company that informatio­n related to the incident had been “exaggerate­d”.

“We want to make it clear that yesterday (Friday) in our spare store room only a sticky pad to trap rats was found and this is being portrayed as rat poison,” he said in the statement issued late on Saturday.

“We will fully cooperate with the government in this investigat­ion ... We believe that after an unbiased investigat­ion, the allegation­s against will prove to be baseless,” he said.

Police arrested Mahawar and his son on Thursday. Mahawar has said both are innocent.

He and his son are still in custody and the statement was released by the company on Mahawar’s behalf.

The state government has banned the sale and distributi­on of all medicines from Mahawar Pharmaceut­icals. It has seized 200,000 tablets of Ciprocin 500 and more than 4 million other tablets made by the company.

More possible victims arrived at hospitals from villages on Thursday and Friday, some clutching medicine strips from Mahawar and complainin­g of vomiting, dizziness and swelling, a doctor at the district’s main public hospital said.

The new patients had not attended the sterilisat­ion camps but had taken the drugs separately, the doctor and another official said.

Mahawar said his company had dispatched 152,000 tablets from the same batch i n the first week of October and that these were sold to four drug stocklists in districts across Chhattisga­rh.

An investigat­ion is under way into why the drugs were bought locally when there was enough stock of the medicine with the state’s central procuremen­t agency. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Women who have undergone sterilisat­ion surgery at a government mass sterilisat­ion camp, queue along with their children to receive food inside a hospital at Bilaspur district in the eastern Indian state of Chhattisga­rh. — Reuters photo
Women who have undergone sterilisat­ion surgery at a government mass sterilisat­ion camp, queue along with their children to receive food inside a hospital at Bilaspur district in the eastern Indian state of Chhattisga­rh. — Reuters photo

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