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European Countries Trade Blame Over E.Coli Outbreak

VERONIKA OLEKSYN and DON MELVIN   05/30/11 02:49 PM ET   AP

BRUSSELS — Europeans traded blame Monday over the source of a mysterious bacterial outbreak that has killed 14 people and sickened hundreds across the continent and forced Russia to ban imports of some fresh vegetables from Spain and Germany out of fear they could be contaminated.

Austrian authorities sent inspectors to supermarkets to make sure Spanish vegetables suspected of contamination have been taken off shelves, while in Italy the country's paramilitary Carabinieri has been on the lookout since Saturday for suspected contaminated imports from Spain, the Netherlands and other European countries.

Pia Ahrenkilde Hansen, a European Union spokeswoman, said German authorities had identified cucumbers from the Spanish cities of Almeria and Malaga as possible sources of contamination and that a third suspect batch, originating either in the Netherlands or in Denmark and traded in Germany, is also under investigation.

In Germany, which has recorded the most infections and all known deaths, officials said they know that at least some Spanish cucumbers tainted with enterohaemorrhagic E.coli, also known as EHEC, have carried the bacteria, although they still have not been able to determine the exact source.

An EU official who spoke on condition of anonymity due to standing regulations, said the transport chain was long, and the cucumbers from Spain could have been contaminated at any point along the route.

Spain, meanwhile, went on the defensive, saying there was no proof that the E. coli outbreak has been caused by Spanish vegetables.

"You can't attribute the origin of this sickness to Spain," Spain's Secretary of State for European Affairs, Diego Lopez Garrido told reporters in Brussels. "There is no proof and that's why we are going to demand accountability from those who have blamed Spain for this matter."

The World Health Organization described the outbreak as "very large and very severe," and urged countries to work together to get to the root of the problem.

"Almost all cases being reported in other countries have a link to travel or residence in Germany," WHO food safety expert Hilde Kruse said, noting that cases of bloody diarrhea caused by EHEC have also been reported in Denmark, Sweden, France, the UK, the Netherlands and Switzerland.

Andreas Hensel, president of Germany's Federal Institute for Risk Assessment, told ZDF television that "we have found the so-called EHEC pathogens on cucumbers, but that does not mean that they are responsible for the whole outbreak."

Spanish Health Minister Leire Pajin stressed there were no Spanish cases reported and urged Germany to speed up its probe and establish proof of what has caused the outbreak. Germany's allegations "create alarm and affect the producers of a country without any evidence," she said.

The Danish Veterinary and Food Administration said there was "great uncertainty" about the suspicion that Danish cucumbers may be involved but carried out a lab test to reassure consumers. Results are expected Tuesday.

In the Netherlands, which exports more than half of the 1.6 billion cucumbers it produces each year to Germany, panicked growers went into damage control mode after all shipments were stopped.

While the National Agricultural Association met with the deputy agriculture secretary to discuss the situation, a group of cucumber growers invited an independent German institute to carry out tests in hopes it would prove their produce is safe.

Marian Bestelink, spokeswoman for the Dutch Food and Wares Authority, said investigations of a Dutch cucumber grower and Dutch warehouse did not uncover any traces of the bacteria.

"So we can definitely cross this Dutch wholesaler and this Dutch grower off the list of possible sources for the infection," she said.

With the cause of the outbreak still unclear, some countries have taken precautionary measures.

Russia's chief sanitary agency on Monday banned the imports of cucumbers, tomatoes and fresh salad from Spain and Germany pending further notice. It said in a statement that it may even ban the imports of fresh vegetables from all European Union member states due to the lack of information about the source of infection.

Austrian authorities sent inspectors to 33 organic supermarkets Monday to make sure Spanish vegetables suspected of contamination have been removed. The move came after a recall and ban on sales of cucumbers, tomatoes and eggplants that originated in Spain and were delivered to stores in Austria by German companies.

Italy's agriculture lobby, Coldiretti, used the outbreak to urge Italians to support their local growers and avoid imports.

Currently, Italian supermarkets are full of peaches, apricots, cherries and plums from Spain. As for pickles and cucumbers, Italy imported some 8 million kilograms (17 million pounds) from Spain last year.

Czech officials said tests on 120 potentially tainted Spanish cucumbers pulled off shelves on Sunday are expected to be concluded in two days. No illnesses have been reported.

In Poland, officials said Monday that a woman has been hospitalized in serious condition after returning from a trip to the northern German city of Hamburg, where at least 467 cases of intestinal infection have been recorded.

On Sunday, authorities said those included 91 cases of the more severe hemolytic uremic syndrome, known as HUS, but the officials noted on Monday that the number of new diarrhea cases was declining. HUS is a rare complication arising from infection associated with the E. coli bacterium.

EU spokesman Frederic Vincent said Sunday that two greenhouses in Spain that were identified as the source of the contaminated cucumbers had ceased activities. The water and soil there are being analyzed to see whether they were the problem, and the results are expected Tuesday or Wednesday, Vincent said.

____

Oleksyn reported from Vienna. Karel Janicek in Prague, Monika Scislowska in Warsaw, Poland, Frances D'Emilio in Rome, Ciaran Giles in Madrid, David Rising and Geir Moulson in Berlin, Frank Jordans in Geneva, Jan M. Olsen in Copenhagen, Denmark, Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow and Toby Sterling in Amsterdam contributed.

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BRUSSELS — Europeans traded blame Monday over the source of a mysterious bacterial outbreak that has killed 14 people and sickened hundreds across the continent and forced Russia to ban imports ...
BRUSSELS — Europeans traded blame Monday over the source of a mysterious bacterial outbreak that has killed 14 people and sickened hundreds across the continent and forced Russia to ban imports ...
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12:08 PM on 06/01/2011
All food sold for human consumption should undergo irradation. It takes just 4 e coli cells to kill a human and no amount of sanitation and eliminate the threat of illness or death from these killers.

Irradation is safe and does not effect the foods quality or taste. It just kills everything living on or in the food.

How many have to die because some people are scared of modern technology?
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03:26 PM on 06/04/2011
Let me know how that works out for you. The Corporate Food Industry love irradiation. Don't you think it would be simpler to stop feeding cows antibiotics? And 100% corn diets? When you feed them straight corn it upsets their digestive system and they start hosting e coli.
Of course you could always go for the meat paste treated with ammonia, another bit of modern tech you probably love.
12:03 PM on 06/01/2011
Living in Spain and No cases here! Example of the News creating fear and outbreak for a scare story! Pathetic. Now being called a terrorist attack on German soil.......No proof of anything anywhere!
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OutAtFirst
Believe it! You don't know how to text and drive
02:34 PM on 05/31/2011
Eeet wuz not we who do zee poop in zee foods.
02:05 PM on 05/31/2011
That outbreak is very serious and the "what's his face" from Spain needs to get in line and help locate the source rather than spew what he thinks is "proof" or not "proof". There IS proof cucumbers from Spain were contaminated.

The important thing is find the source and the transmission routes, and do so without the idiot brigade calling scientists liars.
05:08 PM on 05/31/2011
The idiot who said Spanish cucumbers were at fault has managed to make hundreds of people loose their jobs and millions of euros lost in a country that's hardly in a good economic situation. The Spanish cucumbers are NOT responsible for the E.Coli infection and Germany had to admit it today
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JasonMNan
07:14 PM on 05/31/2011
Ooops, wrong. The strains don´t match so the proof is as yet missing. C´mon, the German authorities wanted to show that they were on top after the PCB oil fiasco and have done it again. The Carry On Gang is alive and well in Germany.
11:24 AM on 05/31/2011
Spanish cucumbers are not behind a deadly E. coli outbreak, Hamburg's Health Minister Cornelia Prüfer-Storcks said on Tuesday.

And now what about this minister?. This kind of minister said the Spanish cucumbers are the fault and now she says no, and she is still occuping their position without any problem. She should resign and she should take care the more than 200million week in cancelled orders.

It is too easy to say stupid things without any consequence and without any evidence.
02:06 PM on 05/31/2011
E. Coli contamination was found on cukes from Spain.
05:01 PM on 05/31/2011
The Spanish greenhouses pointed out by the Germans were tested and founded clean.
In Germany three tests were carried out in cucumbers from Spain. Two were clean and another had traces of a different E.Coli, not the one found on patients.
Not surprising considering nobody is infected in Spain and Belgium, Denmark and other European countries are hardly happy with the way Germany has handled this crisis.
The person who announced that Spanish greenhouses were responsible without proof has managed to make hundreds of people loose their jobs and get tons of vegetables to rot in Southern Spain, besides the millions of Euros lost to those farmers. She should step down.
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JasonMNan
07:15 PM on 05/31/2011
It came from the horse´s mouth dude. Maybe you should run the show and get the number of cases in the tens of thousands.
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10:07 AM on 05/31/2011
But, but I thought it was only US food that harbored bacterial!
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cameron d
Don't blame me, I voted Smitherman.
12:35 AM on 05/31/2011
Could things in Spain get any worse?
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blytzd
05:35 PM on 05/30/2011
Fodd is sdtill better than ours in every way. 3 weeks in Europe and not a bit of heartburn after eating everything and anything I wanted. Less salt, less fat, no corn syrup, food was way fresher.
02:08 PM on 05/31/2011
Baloney on that, blytzd.

I have the European food reports.

You were simply "lucky", that's all.
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blytzd
02:55 PM on 05/31/2011
Not really I got extremely sick in Mainz, but it was over after 24 hours. That is what I get for eating Italian food in Germany though.
05:26 PM on 05/30/2011
No cases in Spain though so is this is looking like it may have more to do with German transportation?
02:08 PM on 05/31/2011
Transport could play a role.
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JasonMNan
07:16 PM on 05/31/2011
You think?!