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Key accused in May 28 Aligarh hooch case nabbed

Updated - June 06, 2021 12:42 pm IST

Published - June 06, 2021 11:48 am IST - Noida/Aligarh

Nearly 50 people have died in Aligarh since consuming spurious liquor on two different occasions recently, according to police

Family members mourn the death of people due to consuming allegedly spurious liquor in Aligarh on May 28, 2021.

The key accused in the last month’s Aligarh hooch incident , which claimed at least 35 lives so far, was nabbed in the early hours of June 6, police said.

Also read: Aligarh hooch tragedy: Congress demands high-level judicial inquiry

Accused Rishi Sharma, who carried a reward of ₹1 lakh on his arrest, was held near Bulandshahr border in western Uttar Pradesh, Aligarh Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Kalanidhi Naithani said.

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Nearly 50 people have died in Aligarh since consuming spurious liquor on two different occasions recently, according to police, while officials estimated that the death toll could go up to 100 as autopsy reports of another 50 hooch consumers were awaited.

“In a major breakthrough in the hooch incident, key accused and Rs 1 lakh rewardee Rishi Sharma has been arrested from near Bulandshahr border,” Naithani said.

“Earlier, the police had arrested accused Vipin Yadav, with ₹50,000 reward on his arrest, and Rishi Sharma’s brother Munish Sharma carrying a bounty of ₹25,000 in this case,” the SSP said.

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The district police chief said so far 17 FIRs have been lodged and 61 accused arrested in Aligarh over the deaths of people after consuming spurious liquor.

Multiple police teams, he said, have carried out investigation and searches in six states since the case came to light while a crackdown on the liquor mafia also started in Aligarh, Mr. Naithani added.

Nine people died after consuming spurious liquor found dumped in a canal near Rohera village in Jawan area, officials said on June 4.

Another man died on June 4 in Aligarh’s Kodiyagunj village and officials link it with the same stock of liquor found in the canal near Rohera village on June 2 by some brick kiln workers.

The 10 deaths are apart from people killed in the first tragedy which broke out on May 28, in which 35 people are confirmed to have died of liquor poisoning.

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