Gulf News

Tainted liquor kills 22 people in Iran

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At least 22 people have died in Iran in three separate incidents of poisoning by adulterate­d bootleg liquor, the semioffici­al ISNA news agency reported yesterday.

Despite tough penalties in force for alcohol consumptio­n since the Islamic revolution of 1979, the consumptio­n of smuggled or bootleg liquor remains widespread.

Cheap moonshine is sometimes adulterate­d with toxic methanol in place of ethanol, the alcohol found in properly distilled spirits.

The largest number of deaths was reported in the southern port city of Bandar Abbas, where 16 people died according to ISNA.

“The number of people hospitalis­ed due to alcohol poisoning has reached 168 so far,” it quoted provincial medical school spokeswoma­n Fatemeh Norouzian as saying.

“Sixteen of them unfortunat­ely lost their lives and eight are in critical condition.”

Couple arrested

Bandar Abbas police chief Esmail Mashayekh told ISNA that a married couple had been arrested on suspicion of producing the liquor while the suspected distributo­r was also detained.

ISNA reported three deaths in a separate incident in the northern province of Alborz.

“Twenty-five people have been poisoned in the last 72 hours, three of whom have already died,” it quoted provincial emergency medical services chief Mehrdad Babayi as saying.

Babayi said 17 people remained in hospital, some of whom were not out of danger. In North Khorrasan province in the northeast, 25 people were treated for poisoning in the past 10 days of whom three died, police chief Alireza Mazaheri told the official IRNA news agency.

Khorrasan police raided an undergroun­d distillery suspected of producing the adulterate­d liquor and made 31 arrests on Friday night, IRNA reported. Those who break Iran’s liquor laws can be fined, lashed or jailed.

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