Over 60 dead in Indonesia from drinking bootleg alcohol

Indonesian medical staff place the bodies of the victims who died from drinking illegal alcohol, at a hospital in Bandung, West Java province on April 9, 2018. 
More than 60 Indonesians are dead and dozens have been hospitalised from drinking illegal homemade alcohol, authorities said, with the toll steadily climbing. / AFP PHOTO / Timur Matahari
Indonesian medical staff place the bodies of the victims who died from drinking illegal alcohol, at a hospital in Bandung, West Java province on April 9, 2018. More than 60 Indonesians are dead and dozens have been hospitalised from drinking illegal homemade alcohol, authorities said, with the toll steadily climbing. / AFP PHOTO / Timur Matahari

More than 60 Indonesians are dead and dozens have been hospitalised from drinking illegal homemade alcohol, authorities said Monday, with the toll steadily climbing.

Police conducted raids in cities across the world’s biggest Muslim majority country to arrest vendors selling the cheap homebrew.

Most Indonesians practice a moderate form of Islam and alcohol is available in big cities.

But high taxes make it expensive so poorly paid workers sometimes turn to potentially dangerous homemade alcohol.

In 2016, 36 people died in Central Java after drinking locally-bought homebrew.

In the latest incidents, the numbers of deaths — including eight in Papua — has been rising over the past week, with the death toll standing at 62 on Monday, according to police and a hospital in West Java.

Seven people have been arrested for allegedly selling the bootleg alcohol, including a man in West Java who mixed mosquito repellent into his homemade concoction.

“He mixed (pure alcohol) with ginseng, cough medicine and mosquito repellent,” local police chief Agung Budi Maryoto told a press conference Monday.

In another case, a vendor who has been arrested admitted he had mixed pure alcohol with Coca-Cola and an energy drink, police said.

Police said they are chasing other sellers and distributors of homebrew.

“We believe there is a big distributor behind this case,” East Jakarta police chief Tony Surya Putra said at the weekend, referring to the deaths of two dozen people in one part of the capital.




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