Tajikistan has opened a criminal investigation after 14 prisoners were fatally poisoned while they were being transported between jails, the justice ministry said Monday, suggesting that another inmate may have given them contaminated bread.
The incident happened on Sunday as more than a hundred prisoners, including eight women, were being transferred in a convoy from prisons in the north of the Central Asian country to jails in the south.
The justice ministry said in a statement that a prisoner handed around bread to a group of 16 inmates travelling in one of the vehicles during a stop on the journey.
Meanwhile in Tajikistan, 14 prisoners dead after snacking on bread during a transfer from one jail to another. Local media reported one of the prisoners shared 3 loafs of bread halfway out and by the time of arrival 16 were already unconscious. https://t.co/IvvgNfNkZL
— Ryskeldi Satke (@RyskeldiSatke) July 8, 2019
It said that "16 prisoners, who were in the back of one of the cars, experienced nausea, dizziness, vomiting" half an hour after consuming the bread.
Medical staff were only able to save the lives of two of the prisoners, according to the statement, which was relayed by the Khovar state information agency.
The state prosecutor had opened a criminal case into the incident, the ministry said.
It comes after a riot inside a prison close to the country's capital Dushanbe in May left 32 people dead including three guards, sparking fears over the security of prisons in the country.
Very disturbing news emerging from #Tajikistan that today 13 prisoners who were being transported along with 115 other prisoners from northern to southern Tajikistan died as a result of food poisoning, specifically from bread which they ate while on the road. Many questions here. https://t.co/Zn2A1PnSnH
— Steve Swerdlow (@steveswerdlow) July 7, 2019
Authorities blamed the Islamic State group for the riot.
In November 2018, another riot claimed by IS left 26 people dead in Khujand, a city in the northeast of the country.
That riot was initiated by a former IS member seeking to spark a mass escape, authorities said.
Tajikistan, the poorest country to claim independence from the Soviet Union, endured a five-year civil war that claimed tens of thousands of lives shortly after the bloc's collapse.
Rights groups regularly criticize the reign of 66-year-old President Emomali Rakhmon, who has led Muslim-majority country since 1992, tolerating little opposition.