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Insecticide in meal that killed pupils

Published: 21 Jul 2013 - 02:49 am | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 02:13 pm


Schoolchildren recovering from food poisoning receive medical treatment at the Patna Medical College and Hospital in Patna yesterday.

PATNA: Oil used to cook a school lunch that killed 23 pupils in eastern India contained a “highly toxic”, concentrated form of insecticide, a forensic report and police said yesterday.

The children died after eating lentils, potatoes and rice cooked at the school last Tuesday with oil containing an agricultural insecticide that was five times the strength sold in the market, the report said.

“The report has found organophosphorus in oil samples collected from the school where the midday meal was prepared and consumed by the children,” Ravinder Kumar, a senior police officer, told reporters in Bihar’s state capital Patna.

“It was observed by the scientists of the Forensic Science Laboratory. The poisonous substance in the oil samples was more than five times the (concentration of the) commercial preparation available in the market,” Kumar added.

He said he did not have an explanation as to why the chemical was so highly concentrated.

Many of the 23 victims, aged four to 12, from Gandaman village in Bihar, were buried on a playing field adjacent to the primary school that served the free school lunch — the only meal of the day for a number of the poor youngsters.

Some 24 children and a cook are still being treated in hospital, but medical officials said they were believed to be out of danger.

Kumar would not be drawn on whether the insecticide had been deliberately added to the oil.

“It is a matter of investigation how and where this poisonous substance got mixed into the oil,” he told reporters. “The insecticide was highly toxic,” he added.

Chandrasekhar Singh, a doctor in a government hospital in Saran, who treated several children said 10 kids who did not eat the curry were safe. 

Parents of several children told officials that their children fell ill due to poisonous vegetable. “Some children, who consumed only rice and pulses, did not fall ill,” they said.

A government inquiry report has blamed Meena Devi, absconding headmistress of the government primary school, for the deaths.

The headmistress remained on the run yesterday as the police hunt for her continued.

“There is no trace of her. The administration has decided to attach her property to put pressure on her to come forward,” Saran Superintendent of Police Sujit Kumar said.

According to district officials probing the incident, Meena Devi had forced the cook to use the “toxic” oil despite the latter’s complaint that it had a pungent smell.

India runs the world’s largest school feeding programme, involving 120 million children, and Bihar is one of India’s most populated and poorest states.

Educators see the scheme as a way to increase school attendance, in a country where almost half of all young children are undernourished.

But children throughout the country often suffer from food poisoning due to poor hygiene in kitchens and occasionally sub-standard food. Police said they had earlier raided the home of the headmistress, Meena Kumari, who fled with her husband and brother-in-law when they saw children falling ill in the school.

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