At least twenty-five residents of the Siberian city of
Irkutsk have died after drinking bath oil, hoping it would give them the same
sensation as alcohol, Russian investigators said on Monday.
Use of counterfeit or surrogate alcohol is rife in Russia's
regions, where two years of economic pain have pushed more people below the
poverty line, though the death toll from this latest incident is unusually
high.
The product had a warning on its label saying it should not
be swallowed, but investigators said people had ignored that and consumed it as
if it was alcohol. The bath oil contained methylated spirit, they said. It was unclear whether those selling the product were
marketing it as a cheaper substitute for alcoholic spirits such as vodka."Forty two people have been admitted to medical
institutions of whom 25 have died," investigators said in the statement."Investigators and the police are conducting searches
at markets where the liquid was first obtained. More than 100 points of sale
have been identified."
The Interfax news agency said the death toll had been
revised up to 33 since the release of the initial statement.Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev told a government meeting he
wanted to look at banning products that could cause so many deaths and said the
country's criminal code was being amended to toughen the punishment for people
caught selling them.
Investigators, who said they had opened a criminal case into
the poisonings, said they had confiscated more than 2,000 litres of spirit.Stanislav Zubovsky, a local prosecutor, told the Interfax
news agency that police were continuing to search residential areas and that
"the number (of deaths) will increase further."
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