No fewer than six people have been reported dead and over 60 hospitalized in Amegu village, Ede-Oballa in Nsukka Local Government Area of Enugu State following an alleged poisoning of pork meat they took at a funeral ceremony.
According
 to reports from Ede-Oballa, more than 60 guests developed severe 
stomach problems after the funereal ceremony, prompting their immediate 
hospitalization. Investigation by Sunday Sun showed that all the popular
 hospitals in the university town of Nsukka including the Catholic 
Mission- owned Bishop Shanahan have been flooded with the victims who 
were said to be in critical conditions. A woman was said to be the first
 casualty of the meat poisoning followed by three girls while it was 
feared that two others who are not natives of the community also died.
It
 was gathered that a pig farmer who sold the infected animal to a woman 
(name withheld) who hosted the funeral, was in police net. Hospital 
sources expressed apprehension over the survival of the victims, saying 
they ought to have been rushed to the hospital same night. “In a 
situation like this, victims should be rushed to the hospital promptly 
for early stomach wash”, said a hospital source. The source however said
 frantic efforts are being made to save the lives of the victims Another
 reliable source suspected that guests at the funeral might have been 
served the meat of a dead pig injected by a veterinary doctor.
The
 source said the owner of the pig (name withheld) had lied to the woman 
that the pig fell into a ditch. Apparently due to the intimidating size 
of the pig and its relative cheapness, the woman quickly entered a 
bargain and bought the meat not knowing it was sick and had been treated
 recently by a veterinary doctor who also advised that in the event of its death, the animal should be buried. A source quoted the doctor
 who has been quizzed by the police as saying that he advised the pig 
farmer to bury the animal if it died within three weeks of the 
injection.
The tragic incident has caused tension in Nsukka zone 
where pigs are used at funeral ceremonies as an imperative and status 
symbol. It was gathered that since the incident, guests at burial 
ceremonies in the area have been avoiding pork. This has created 
problems for pig farmers who have lost patronage due to the tragedy.
Our reporter could not reach the veterinary doctor at the time of filing this report. A senior police officer attached to the Nsukka Urban Police Command said that some of the guests and the pig farmer were helping the police in their investigation.

 
 
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