PETALING JAYA - Another four deaths have been connected to
methanol poisoning, bringing the total number of casualties to 33.
Selangor has been the hardest hit with 20 fatalities,
followed by Kuala Lumpur (10 deaths) and Perak (three) since the case became
known last Monday.
The vast majority of the casualties were Myanmar nationals
(11 casualties), followed by Malaysians (nine). The rest were from Bangladesh,
India, Nepal and Indonesia.
The identity of four casualties remained obscure.
Health director-general Datuk Dr Noor Hisham Abdullah said
the previous night that the ministry had conducted checks on 586 premises
selling liquor and discovered 1,816 bottles labelled with an assortment of
brands that did not meet the Food Act and Food Regulations 1985.
He also asked individuals who suspect that they have
methanol poisoning to seek for treatment.
“Those who have symptoms of methanol poisoning such as
stomach ache, nausea, vomiting, headache, and blurred vision within five days
of consuming alcohol need to seek immediate treatment at any clinic or
hospital,” he added.
In the meantime, Malaysia Crime Prevention Foundation senior
vice-chairman Tan Sri Lee Lam Thye has called for serious activity on illegal
liquor.
He encouraged the authorities such as the Customs
Department, police and local councils to conduct a crackdown on businesses
offering such beverages.
“With the help from the Health Ministry and Chemistry
Department, random samples should be taken and analyzed to determine whether
the liquor has been adulterated or it contains high levels of methanol,” he
said in a statement yesterday.
“A mandatory jail sentence should be imposed on those who
sell smuggled or adulterated alcohol.”
Existing laws, he said, should also be revised to curb
liquor sales as alcoholic outlets were mushrooming and working with minimal
regulation.
Lee attributed the methanol poisoning cases to a lack of
authority over liquor sales as many shops were offering cheap smuggled or defiled
liquor.
“The main reasons behind the cases are the adulteration of
samsu, beer or liquor with cheap but poisonous methanol which is being
commercially sold as methylated spirit.
“It baffles me as to why some of the liquor sold in our
country contains methanol that exceeds the permitted level, as shown by an
analysis done by the Health Ministry,” he said.
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