Vietnam Airlines in-flight meal likely ruled out in food
poisoning of Japanese students
The first Airbus
A350-900 XWB of Vietnam Airlines thoroughly painted at a plant in Toulouse,
France, in March 2015.
More than 30 Japanese
students had to be admitted to hospital over food poisoning shortly after
their arrival from Ho Chi Minh City on a Vietnam Airlines flight on Friday,
but the in-flight meals could be ruled out as cause of the illness.
The Vietnamese national flag carrier confirmed later the same
day that 34 Japanese passengers, all high school students, were rushed to
hospital with ill stomach upon landing in Tokyo-based Narita airport.
As of Friday noon, 33 of the students had been discharged,
Vietnam Airlines announced on its verified Facebook page.
The carrier said it is working with airport authorities to
verify the cause of the poisoning. The Boeing 787 that carried the Japanese
students along with more than 300 passengers to Narita has also been inspected
and eventually allowed to resume service normally.
On Friday afternoon, Lai Xuan Thanh, head of the Civil
Aviation Authority of Vietnam, said the food poisoning victims are members of
a delegation of 263 students and teachers of several Japanese high schools.
Shortly after boarding, two of the students started to suffer
stomachache and diarrhea. The symptom then spread to 34 of the students, with
18 of them also suffering vomiting and fever.
The medic team on board the plane had actively assisted the
victims, Thanh said.
According to newswire VnExpress, a representative of
the Japanese delegation confirmed in the written record of the case that the
students had yet to use the in-flight meals when they began showing sign of
food poisoning.
Prior to their flight, the students had dinner at a hotel in
Ho Chi Minh City, according to the record.
“We think the passengers might have been poisoned by the food
at that hotel,” Thanh said. “All of the meals served aboard the flight were
normal, as was the aircraft itself.”
The official added that the Japanese side has yet to release
any official conclusion about the case to Vietnam Airlines.
TUOI TRE NEWS
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Thứ Bảy, 29 tháng 10, 2016
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