Nearly 50 Indonesians dead in April from bootleg liquor

AP  |  Jakarta 

Nearly 50 people have died in a little more than a week after drinking bootleg liquor in western Indonesia, including Jakarta, the capital, officials said today.

In the latest incident, 17 people died between Thursday and early Monday in Cicalengka subdistrict near the capital of

of the in Cicalengka, Yani Sumpena, said that 16 died at the hospital and one was dead on arrival.

In total, some 40 people were admitted with symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, shortness of breath and unconsciousness, and 13 are still being treated, Sumpena said.

High taxes on alcohol have spawned a black market for booze among the poor in Indonesia, the worlds most populous Muslim nation, where drinking alcohol is frowned upon but not illegal under Potentially lethal ingredients, including methanol, are sometimes used in bootleg recipes or added to soft drinks.

said police had closed four liquor stores in the Cicalengka region and confiscated dozens of jerry cans containing palm wines and hundreds of bottles of various types of liquor.

police said today that another 31 people have died in and its of and from alcohol poisoning in separate incidents since the beginning of the month.

Police have arrested at least four suspects in the area who are accused of selling tainted liquor.

In late March, six people died in Indonesia's easternmost region of from drinking tainted alcohol.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, April 09 2018. 14:05 IST