Nine Nepalis die in Kuwait after drinking poisonous alcohol

 vKathmandu, August 15

Nine Nepalis have died in Kuwait in the last three days after drinking toxic alcohol, the Nepali Embassy in Kuwait confirmed. Several others are still in hospital, while some have already been discharged.

Giriprasad Acharya, the Labour Counsellor at the embassy, said the exact cause of death will only be clear once medical reports are received. “So far, nine Nepalis have died in three days. We cannot say for sure if it was toxic alcohol until the reports arrive,” he explained.

Kuwait’s Ministry of Health has reported a sharp rise in hospital cases caused by methanol-mixed alcohol. Official figures show 23 people, including nine Nepalis, have died, and over 160 others are receiving treatment in Adan, Farwaniya, and Mubarak Al-Kabeer hospitals.

Although alcohol is banned in Kuwait, it is still produced and sold illegally. Authorities are now investigating where the toxic alcohol came from. Some patients are undergoing dialysis for kidney failure, while others have lost partial or complete vision.

Initial findings suggest the alcohol contained methanol—a toxic chemical used in products like antifreeze, fuel, and solvents. Unlike ethanol (the alcohol normally found in drinks), methanol is poisonous and can cause vomiting, headaches, blurred vision, coma, or even death.

Most of the victims were construction workers, officials said.

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