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Illicit booze kills 10 in Iran holy city: report

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  • Illicit booze kills 10 in Iran holy city: report

    Khaleej Times, United Arab Emirates
    April 8 2007

    Illicit booze kills 10 in Iran holy city: report
    (AFP)

    8 April 2007



    TEHERAN - Ten people have died after drinking homemade hooch in a
    holy city in Iran, where the consumption of all alcohol is banned,
    the Kayhan newspaper reported on Sunday.


    `On April 2, a large quantity of bootlegged alcohol was distributed
    in Qom,' Iran's clerical capital and the home of many religious
    seminaries, south of Teheran, it said.

    `A number of the drinkers were hospitalised and according to the
    inhabitants of Qom, 10 people have died,' the ultra-conservative
    daily added.

    It said that local officials had yet to confirm the death toll.

    It is not the first time that toxic moonshine has claimed lives in
    Iran, an Islamic country where the production and consumption of
    alcohol is generally strictly prohibited.

    In May 2006, 15 people died from alcohol poisoning in the southern
    city of Sirjan, while in June 2004 it was reported that 22 Iranians
    died of the same cause in the southern city of Shiraz.

    Only recognised Christian minorities in Iran, such as the Armenians,
    are allowed to produce and consume alcohol, discreetly and behind
    closed doors so as not to offend Islamic sensibilities.

    Production, sale or consumption of alcohol are otherwise punishable
    by jail or the lash, although this has not stopped significant
    smuggling from neighbouring countries.

    Newspapers reported on Sunday that 46,000 cans of beer had been
    seized and destroyed in the capital in recent months.

    Home distilled spirits sell for far less than smuggled foreign brands
    and are the tipple of choice in poorer neighbourhoods, but the use of
    industrial chemicals in their production sometimes poses serious
    health risks.
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