Over 800 Students Suffer Mass Food Poisoning From Free School Meals In Indonesia

One case affected more than 500 and was the biggest outbreak yet under President Prabowo Subianto's flagship programme.

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The local government will increase surveillance of the kitchen that provides the meals, officials said
Jakarta:

Over 800 students fell sick in two cases of mass food poisoning this week after consuming free school meals sponsored by the Indonesian government, officials said on Friday.

One case affected more than 500 and was the biggest outbreak yet under President Prabowo Subianto's flagship programme.      

From January, when the programme was launched, up to August, over 4,000 children have been hit by food poisoning after consuming the meals, according to Ian, an Indonesian-based think tank, the Institute for Development of Economics and Finance, raising questions on oversight.  

In Indonesia's West Java province, 569 students from five schools in the Garut region experienced nausea and vomiting on Wednesday after consuming chicken and rice provided by one free meals kitchen a day earlier, Nurdin Yana, the secretary of the Garut regional government, told Reuters.

"As of Friday, ten students are still being treated at the hospital, and others have recovered," Yana said. Initially, about 30 students had to be hospitalised, while the rest were treated at home, he added. 

The local government will increase surveillance of the kitchen that provides the meals, Yana said, adding the programme would not be halted but, instead, students would be given more basic food, such as bread, milk, boiled eggs, and fruit for now.  

Another mass food poisoning case linked to the programme occurred on Wednesday in the Banggai Islands of Central Sulawesi province, affecting 277 students, the National Nutrition Agency, which oversees the programme, said in a statement, adding that meal distribution in the area was temporarily halted.  

Prabowo's spokesperson, Prasetyo Hadi, said on Friday that the government apologised for the "recurrence of cases in several areas that are, of course, not what we had hoped for or intentional."

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Questions have been raised about standards and oversight of the programme, which has expanded rapidly to reach over 20 million recipients, with an ambitious goal of reaching 83 million by year-end and a budget of 171 trillion rupiah ($10.32 billion).

The budget for the programme will be doubled next year. 

 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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