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France probes deaths of two babies after powdered milk recall
France's health minister on Friday sought to reassure consumers that all suspicious infant formula had been withdrawn, as an investigation began into the deaths of two babies who drank possibly contaminated powdered milk.
The infant formula industry has been rocked in recent weeks by several firms recalling batches that could be contaminated with cereulide, a toxin that can cause diarrhoea and vomiting.
The potentially contaminated milk has been "withdrawn" from the market, Health Minister Stephanie Rist said.
In particular, Nestle pulled batches of infant milk in several European countries on January 6.
French investigators are looking into the cause of death of two infants who allegedly consumed Nestle milk.
One was a two-week-old baby who died on January 8 in Bordeaux, southwest France, after drinking milk from the now-recalled batches, a prosecutor in the city said on Thursday.
The second infant, aged just 27 days, died on December 23 in the western city ofAngers, the local prosecutor said.
The mother contacted the authorities this week, saying the baby had drunk Nestle milk from one of the lots removed from the market.
At this time, there was no established causal link between the formula and their deaths, according to French authorities.
Nestle told AFP on Friday it would cooperate with the probes, adding there was "no evidence" at this stage linking its products to the infant deaths.
In another recall, Danone on Friday said it would "withdraw from targeted markets a very limited number of specific batches of infant formula" to comply with the latest guidance from local food safety authorities, without specifying which.
A source close to the matter said the move followed changes introduced by authorities, notably in Ireland.
It comes after Singapore authorities on Saturday recalled Dumex baby formula, a brand owned by the French food giant.
French group Lactalis on Wednesday also said it was recalling batches in France and other countries over worries they contained cereulide.
Lactalis did not name the supplier behind the tainted ingredient.
Outside France, countries concerned included Australia, Chile, China, Colombia, the Republic of Congo, Ecuador, Spain, Madagascar, Mexico, Uzbekistan, Peru, Georgia, Greece, Kuwait, the Czech Republic, and Taiwan, a Lactalis spokesperson told AFP.
Nogueira--PC