Eleven die, more than 90 sick after eating temple food in India

Two questioned on suspicion of poisoning tomato rice at building in Karnataka

File photograph: Getty Images/iStock
File photograph: Getty Images/iStock

Eleven people including two children died and more than 90 were hospitalised after consuming a religious food offering at a temple in southern India police said on Saturday, calling it a suspected case of mass food poisoning.

Two people have been questioned in connection with the incident on Friday, after devotees fell ill when they ate tomato rice at a Hindu temple in the state of Karnataka. Many people were treated for vomiting, diarrhoea and respiratory diseases.

Media reports in India said the suspected food poisoning was the result of pesticide contamination but police said it was too early to draw conclusions about the cause.

“We have sent the organs of the dead people and the poisoned food to the forensic laboratory,” Geetha MS, a senior police officer in the Chamarajanagar district where the temple is located, told Reuters. “Only after receiving the report can we say what went wrong.”

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Several crows and dogs were also found dead after eating the food, Geetha added.

In 2013, 23 school children died in the eastern state of Bihar in one of the worst outbreaks of mass food poisoning in the country. Police had suspected that it was caused by cooking oil that had been kept in a container previously used to store pesticide.

The Karnataka government would provide financial assistance of 500,000 rupees (€6,150) to the families of each of the dead, according to media reports. –Reuters