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Germany suspects three more deaths from tainted food

29 May 2011, 00:42 CET
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(BERLIN) - German health chiefs said Saturday they feared bacteria blamed on tainted Spanish cucumbers had caused three more deaths in the country amid efforts to trace the cause of an illness affecting hundreds.

The confirmed number of deaths in Germany from the enterohaemorrhagic E. coli bacteria currently stands at two, but seven more are now suspected among about 300 cases of infection reported in several countries in the past week.

The three new deaths in north Germany were announced by the health ministry of Schleswig-Holstein state and a clinic in Hamburg. They were of two women in their 80s and a third in her 30s.

Authorities in southern Spain said Saturday they had introduced restrictions on two distributors suspected of exporting cucumbers tainted with the bacteria that causes the potentially fatal haemolytic uraemic syndrome (HUS).

The regional council of Andalusia said suspect batches of cucumbers had been withdrawn pending laboratory checks whose results would be known Monday.

The European Commission said earlier that Spain had suspended the activities of two distributors in the southern provinces of Almeria and Malaga, but spokesman Frederic Vincent confirmed Saturday that only the greenhouses where the suspect cucumbers had been grown were affected.

We don't know where the contamination occurred, whether on the (Spanish) sites or along the distribution chain," he said.

A probe was launched and samples taken from the soil, water and products from the two agricultural sites, the European Union's executive arm said Friday.

"Investigations are ongoing to identify other potential sources, while a third suspect batch of cucumbers originating either in the Netherlands or in Denmark, and traded in Germany, is also under investigation," it said.

A suspect consignment of Spanish cucumbers was distributed to Denmark, but authorities there traced the vegetables and withdrew them from the market, the statement said.

The Andalusian authorities said Saturday that exhaustive checks by the Malaga company on its cucumbers had shown them totally free of contamination.

"Nevertheless we decided to suspend the product as a preventive measure," a statement added.

In the other company, at Roquetas del Mar, a consignment had been identified with some difficulty, it said.

Samples from suspect batches had been sent to a laboratory in the northwest province of Galicia for testing.

Meanwhile the Spanish daily El Pais said the Malaga growers, Frunet Bio, had been advised from Germany four days after the dispatch of a consignment on May 12 that their cucumbers had been dropped on the ground in a Hamburg market.

"We have that in writing," it quoted a spokesman for Frunet Bio as saying Saturday. "When that happens we can no longer guarantee the product."

The Eppendorf clinic near Hamburg which recorded one of Saturday's deaths said it had introduced a new treatment with an antibody aimed at countering kidney damage, but would not know for several weeks if it worked.

Germany has confirmed 276 cases of HUS, by far the largest number in Europe.

Sweden has reported 25 E. coli cases, with 10 of those people developing HUS, according to the European Commission said. Denmark reported seven E. coli cases (including three HUS) while Britain counted three cases (two HUS).

The Netherlands had one HUS case and Austria reported two cases of enterohaemorrhagic E. coli, while Switzerland has one suspected case.

The French economy, health and agriculture ministries said Saturday that three suspected cases were being investigated in France, linked to the German epidemic and not to a batch of cucumbers withdrawn from sale earlier.


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