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Death by curry: Indian restaurant owner charged with manslaughter in UK

March 26, 2015 12:24 pm | Updated 12:25 pm IST - London

A customer died from anaphylactic shock after eating curry believed to have contained peanuts

The owner of a chain of award-winning Indian restaurants in the UK has been charged with the manslaughter of a 38-year-old customer who died following a severe allergic reaction after eating a curry that contained peanuts.

Paul Wilson was killed by anaphylactic shock after eating the curry from a takeaway which is believed to have contained peanuts, The Telegraph reported. On Wednesday, restaurant owner Mohammed Khalique Zaman, 52, was charged with manslaughter by gross negligence over the tragedy. This is the first time that a restaurant owner has faced such a charge.

Mr. Wilson, who lived near Thirsk, North Yorkshire, bought the meal from The Indian Garden, in nearby Easingwold, in January 2014 just months before the introduction of a law requiring food businesses to provide allergy information on all unpackaged food.

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Mr. Wilson, who had a six-year-old son and had recently been promoted to deputy manager at the Oak Tree pub in Helperby, was found collapsed in his bathroom. Paramedics were unable to revive him.

Although allergies are increasingly common, only around 10 people die annually in the UK from reactions to food. Trading Standards has recently begun clamping down on restaurants that use ground peanuts instead of ground almonds because they are cheaper, but do not disclose the ingredient.

In 2011, The Spice Lounge in Norfolk was ordered to pay 6,000 pounds when a diner needed emergency treatment after eating dairy despite warning of allergies. But in December, new EU legislation came into force which compels restaurants to declare if their food contained allergens, such as nuts, milk, celery, gluten and soya.

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Mr. Zaman has run several restaurants across North Yorkshire and York for more than 25 years, including the Jaipur Spice chain, which won the Best In Yorkshire award at the Bangladeshi Catering Association Awards in 2012 and 2013. But Peter Mann, head of the CPS complex casework unit, said following a 14-month investigation, it had concluded there was sufficient evidence, and that it was in the public interest to charge Mr. Zaman.

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