Get you up to speed: Austrian police arrest man after rat poison found in HiPP baby food jars
A 39-year-old man has been arrested after rat poison was discovered in jars of HiPP baby food, leading to recalls in 1,500 supermarkets. HiPP has removed its carrot-and-potato baby food jars from shelves in Austria, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic due to the contamination scare.
Authorities have launched an investigation after a 39-year-old man was arrested in connection with rat poison found in jars of HiPP baby food sold in Austria. HiPP has stated that the recall is precautionary and resulted from an extortion attempt, affirming that the products left their facilities in perfect condition.
HiPP has removed its jars of carrot-and-potato baby food from shelves in Austria, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic following the contamination scare. Authorities continue to search for a sixth tampered jar believed to be in Austria.
Man arrested after jars of HiPP baby food found contaminated with rat poison | News World
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Authorities are still searching for a sixth jar, believed to be in Austria (Picture: Charlotte SIEMON / AFP via Getty Images)
A man has been arrested after rat poison was discovered in jars of HiPP baby food across Europe.
Police took a 39-year-old suspect into custody following a contamination scare that triggered recalls in 1,500 supermarkets.
An investigation was launched when a customer reported that a jar had been tampered with.
The seized jar of carrots and potatoes flavoured baby food then tested positive for rat poison in the city of Eisenstadt.
Authorities said five tampered jars were intercepted before they could be eaten.

A seized jar of hip baby food (carrots and potatoes) tested positive for rat poison during an investigation (Picture: Tobias Steinmaurer/APA-Images/Shutterstock)
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Baby food manufacturer HiPP has taken its jars off the shelves in Austria, Slovakia and Czech Republic.
The products affected were carrot-and-potato baby food meant for infants as young as five months old and were being sold at SPAR supermarkets in Austria.
Authorities are still searching for a sixth jar, believed to be in Austria, which has not yet been located.
Police said affected jars were marked with a white sticker and a red circle on the bottom.
Families have also been warned to look out for damaged or open lids, jars missing a safety seal or an unusual or spoiled odour.
HiPP revealed it has been a victim of extortion, adding that someone sent a message to a shared mailbox, prompting them to contact police.
The company said the products all left their facilities in perfect condition.
They stressed the recall was precautionary and not a result of a manufacturing fault.
Store bosses have pledged to hand a full refund to customers who return the products.
Anyone who has purchased any of the suspect jars has been advised to thoroughly wash their hands.
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