Most died far from the point of sale, 12 of them at home and two on the road, unable to make it to a hospital on time because of the sudden effects of the tainted drug. Many suffered heart attacks.
According
to recent news, the death toll among dozens of people who consumed cocaine
likely laced with opioids in Buenos Aires rose to 24 on Friday, with 23 still
in hospital, health officials said.
Eight of
the hospitalized are in serious condition and on mechanical ventilation.
Officials
said 24 people, aged between 21 and 58, have died since Tuesday night from
adulterated cocaine bought from dealers in the poor neighborhood of Loma
Hermosa, some 40 kilometers (25 miles) from the Buenos Aires city center.
Twenty-three
remained hospitalized Friday, according to a provincial government update.
Three of
them had been discharged but had to be re-hospitalized after taking more of the
cocaine, provincial health minister Nicolas Kreplak said.
More than
200 other people sought medical intervention after consuming the substance,
presenting symptoms of varying degrees of gravity.
- Arrests
and seizures -
Thirteen
people rounded up in a police operation to establish the origins of the tainted
drug were due to appear before magistrates as part of the ongoing
investigation, according to the Telam news agency.
They
include the well-known leader of a drug trafficking network in greater Buenos
Aires, a 33-year-old nicknamed "El Paisa."
The
substance with which the cocaine was laced has not yet been confirmed, but
authorities say it is likely an opioid.
Police
have seized more than 20,000 doses of cocaine in a crackdown, but have not
revealed how many of these were from the laced batch.
The
incident has brought to light the dangers of illegal drug use, especially of
cheap, low-quality cocaine sold and consumed in Buenos Aires's poorest
communities.
According
to security chief Sergio Berni, at least 250,000 doses of cocaine are sold
daily in Buenos Aires province, home to some 40 percent of the Argentine
population of 45 million and with high poverty rates.
Officials
said Thursday that things were under control, but urged recent buyers of
cocaine in and around the capital city to throw it away.
"Every
dealer that buys cocaine cuts it. Some do it with non-toxic substances such as
starch. Others put hallucinogens in it, and if there is no form of control,
this kind of thing happens," Berni said.
-
'Absolutely exceptional' -
San Martin
public prosecutor Marcelo Lapargo has said what happened was "absolutely
exceptional" and there was "no precedent" in Argentina.
Illegal
drug use has been on the rise in the South American country.
In the
mid-1980s, half a ton of cocaine was seized every year -- a decade later, it
was four times that, official data shows.
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