“The whole thing is a big scandal. People were very unsettled. Every day something different was announced. Now I hear on the radio that it was the sprouts. But people were even buying less fruit. That is simply insane.’’ Riza Cetinkaya, Berlin grocer who says sales have dropped 70%
Out of frustration the German health officials are back to blaming sprouts for the deadly e. coli outbreak. The problem is that they are simply guessing, again.
Officials say the sprouts are the ‘most likely’ source, but at the same time admit the produce has tested negative for e. coli.
How did they come to their conclusion? They made a map showing the concentration of infection cases, then basically concluded that the sprout farm near the center ‘must’ be the source. Police detectives know you can’t rely solely on lines drawn on a map.
Consumer Protection officials then announced that they had found a contaminated container of sprouts, in the trash can of a family that is infected. The officials concluded that it was ‘proof’ that the sprouts were the cause. Is it possible the sprout container itself is the source of contamination? Remember e. coli is spread by contact with fecal matter, or animal/human waste. What else was in the trash can?
One government official, Reinhard Burger, of the Robert Koch Institute, admitted that the window of opportunity to link fecal waste and contact with produce, was gone. So all officials can do now is guess.
The sprout farm, in Lower Saxony, has been shut down and sealed off.