17 July 2013

Children die after eating lunch

Josh Voorhees has a Slate article about a bad meal in India:
This is a difficult one to start your morning with: officials in India say that at least 22 children are dead and more than two dozen others are sick after eating a free school lunch that was most likely tainted with some type of insecticide. It's unclear how exactly the chemicals ended up in the meal, but the early speculation is focused on the possibility that the food may not have been properly washed before it was cooked. The Associated Press has the details:
The children, between the ages of five and twelve, fell ill soon after eating lunch in Gandamal village in Masrakh block, fifty miles north of the state capital of Patna. School authorities immediately stopped serving the meal of rice, lentils, soybeans, and potatoes as the children started vomiting.The lunch, part of a popular national campaign to give at least one daily hot meal to children from poor families, was cooked in the school kitchen.
The children were rushed to a local hospital and later to Patna for treatment, said state official Abhijit Sinha. In addition to the 22 children who died, another 25 children and the school cook were in hospital undergoing treatment, P.K. Sahi, the state education minister. Three children were in serious condition.
Officials are still investigating exactly what happened, but they've already suspended the person in charge of the meal program and registered a case of criminal negligence against the school's headmaster, who reportedly fled as soon as the children began to get sick.
Rico says his knee-jerk reaction was 'now we're gonna have to ban school lunches' (like carrying gubs in school), but it's in India, so who cares? (Well, the Indians do, but they've got more kids where those came from...)

Rico says that his above callous comment about Indians earned him a rocket comment...

1 comment:

Perry said...

Aw, Rico, that was cold. Don't you care about your fellow earthlings, even those on the other side of the planet? I suppose it's human nature to care more about ones fellow countrymen, though. To be honest, it took a photo of a crying father holding his dead daughter to bring tears to my eyes.

 

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