Monday, January 26, 2026
News

Pak: Woman, four minor daughters die after 'consuming' toxic food

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

Lahore | May 5, 2024 10:30:35 AM IST
A mother and her four young daughters lost their lives after ingesting toxic food in Tandlianwala, Punjab, according to ARY News.

Confirming the fatalities, the police stated that the deceased were identified as three-year-old Farzana, four-year-old Aqsa, five-year-old Rukhsana, eight-year-old Muskan, and their 34-year-old mother Muskan.

The incident occurred in Tandlianwala, situated 40 kilometers from Faisalabad and 45 kilometers from Okara, according to ARY News.

"The dead bodies were transferred to the District Headquarters Hospital," the police mentioned.

In a disturbingly similar occurrence on April 5, a family lost four of its members after consuming poisonous tea in Toba Tek Singh.

Reportedly, the tragic incident unfolded in Toba Tek Singh, where three family members--six-year-old Ali, seven-year-old Iqra, and 22-year-old Sania--perished after drinking the lethal tea.

The hospital administration disclosed that the injured mother and her minor daughters were rushed to a nearby hospital in critical condition. Unfortunately, 18-year-old Madiha also succumbed to her injuries, ARY News reported.

The dismal state of government-run hospitals and the entire public-sector healthcare infrastructure has long been a subject of criticism and despair among both critics and citizens in Pakistan, according to a Dawn report.

However, amidst this already bleak landscape, a more sinister and shadowy issue persists largely unnoticed: the exploitation of patients by certain non-governmental organisations (NGOs) posing as healthcare providers. These NGOs, while purporting to offer better alternatives, are instead preying on the vulnerability of patients, extorting them for financial gain.

This egregious practice strikes at the very core of Pakistan's healthcare system, casting doubt on the integrity of institutions meant to provide affordable and quality medical care. Consequently, it erodes trust in these NGOs, exacerbating the healthcare crisis faced by the masses.

The dire situation underscores the urgent necessity for enhanced oversight and regulation of the healthcare sector in Pakistan. Without robust measures in place to curb such exploitative practices, the already precarious state of healthcare in the country is destined to deteriorate further, amplifying the suffering of those in need, Dawn reported. (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS ()
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE WORLD NEWS
'Growing strength of India-EU partnershi...
French President Macron extends wishes o...
'May friendship between our people conti...
Pak: Sammi Deen Baloch slams sentencing ...
Xi decapitates top military leadership i...
'Appreciate India's timely, consistent, ...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
Badrinath-Kedarnath Temple Committee to ...
R-Day 2026: BJP national president Nitin...
Tripura CM Manik Saha unfurls National F...
ED attaches assets worth Rs 1986.48 cror...
'Private firm knows about water contamin...
R-Day 2026 celebrations conclude with ai...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
First look of Ravi Teja's 'Irumudi'... 
"Never before have farmers been inv... 
Arunachal Pradesh: Indian Army cele... 
'Khichdi' actress Vandana Pathak ex... 
Indian Embassy in Saudi Arabia cele... 
PM Modi praises security forces, sh... 
Delhi: Republic Day celebrated with... 
BCCI VP Rajeev Shukla congratulates...