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<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR>April 9, 2009
Rojak food poisoning
</TR><!-- headline one : start --><TR>Stall did not display correct hygiene grade
</TR><!-- headline one : end --><TR>Stallholder insists his stall graded 'B' even though NEA revised rating to 'C' </TR><!-- Author --><TR><TD class="padlrt8 georgia11 darkgrey bold" colSpan=2>By Sujin Thomas
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Mr Allaudin, 70, outside his rojak stall, which displays a 'B' or good hygiene rating - even though the grading has been revised to 'C' by the NEA. He says that he is sorry about what has happened to his customers, and is prepared to face the consequences. -- ST PHOTO: LAU FOOK KONG
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<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->TOLD that a second person had died after eating what seemed to be tainted Indian rojak from his stall, Mr Sheik Allaudin Mohideen, 70, could only utter: 'I don't know what to say.'
After composing himself, he mounted his defence: Since taking over the stall 10 years ago, he has had a clean record, he said. He also took umbrage at news reports that said his stall had received a 'C', or average, hygiene grading. He insisted that it has always been graded 'B', or good.
<TABLE width=200 align=left valign="top"><TBODY><TR><TD class=padr8><!-- Vodcast --><TABLE><TBODY><TR><TD>
VIDEO
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On his hygiene record, NEA would say only that no offences have been recorded against him for the last five years.
Mr Allaudin was sombre when he spoke to The Straits Times yesterday morning. He had been wandering aimlessly around the Geylang Serai Temporary Market, which is next to his home in Eunos, casually chatting with other stallholders. Nearby was one of his two sons, both of whom help him run the popular stall with two helpers.
He declined to speak about the incident initially, but changed his mind on Wednesday afternoon.
Mr Allaudin said the first clue he had that something had gone horribly wrong came last Saturday morning, when two men approached him at his stall and berated him for serving their family members tainted food.
He said he was so stunned by their tongue-lashing that he threw away the peanut gravy that he had been preparing for his Indian rojak that day.
Shortly after, he was approached by officers from the NEA, who told him 80 people had come down with food poisoning after eating at his stall.
The stall, described by other stallholders as the main draw of the centre, was then shut, and has to remain so until the authorities allow it to reopen.
On Wednesday, Mr Allaudin dismissed talk that he might have been serving leftovers. He maintained that whatever was left unsold when he closed his stall at 10pm each day was thrown away.
Continuing to plead his innocence, he said: 'I'm just running a business. I had no intention of harming people. I'm very upset.'
He said he has spent most of his time since Saturday cooped up in his four-room flat, afraid that he would be confronted by upset customers.
Asked about the level of hygiene at his stall, he said he prepares and serves rojak 'in a clean manner'.
He said he buys almost all his ingredients from the wet market next door and prepares the dough, fritters and gravy at the stall itself.
He also said he trusted his food suppliers and did not check the produce they delivered to his stall each morning.
He added that the incidents have weighed heavily on him.
'I haven't been able to sleep or eat since Tuesday night. I don't know if I'm going to live or die.'
He would have liked to have been at the funeral of Madam Aminah Samijo, 57, on Tuesday, he said, but was afraid to go.
Asked if he would go to the funeral of the second victim, Madam Norani Kassim, 58, he replied: 'I don't know how her family will react if they see me.
'What can I do? I am so sorry this happened to my customers. I can only leave this matter to God now,' he added.
Investigations, meanwhile, are continuing. All five who work at the stall have given stool and blood samples to the authorities.
Police, as well as officials from the Health Ministry and NEA, have also taken statements from them.
Yesterday morning, more officials descended upon his stall, snapping photographs of its interior.
Mr Allaudin has no idea where all this is going to lead to, but he said he was prepared to face the consequences.
It was clear, though, that what lies ahead for his business was on his mind. Casting a wary eye on the future, he said: 'Customers have told me that my rojak is good but after this, I'm not sure if it will be No. 1 again.'
Rojak food poisoning
</TR><!-- headline one : start --><TR>Stall did not display correct hygiene grade
</TR><!-- headline one : end --><TR>Stallholder insists his stall graded 'B' even though NEA revised rating to 'C' </TR><!-- Author --><TR><TD class="padlrt8 georgia11 darkgrey bold" colSpan=2>By Sujin Thomas
</TD></TR><!-- show image if available --><TR vAlign=bottom><TD width=330>

</TD><TD width=10>


Mr Allaudin, 70, outside his rojak stall, which displays a 'B' or good hygiene rating - even though the grading has been revised to 'C' by the NEA. He says that he is sorry about what has happened to his customers, and is prepared to face the consequences. -- ST PHOTO: LAU FOOK KONG
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->TOLD that a second person had died after eating what seemed to be tainted Indian rojak from his stall, Mr Sheik Allaudin Mohideen, 70, could only utter: 'I don't know what to say.'
After composing himself, he mounted his defence: Since taking over the stall 10 years ago, he has had a clean record, he said. He also took umbrage at news reports that said his stall had received a 'C', or average, hygiene grading. He insisted that it has always been graded 'B', or good.
<TABLE width=200 align=left valign="top"><TBODY><TR><TD class=padr8><!-- Vodcast --><TABLE><TBODY><TR><TD>
VIDEO
</TD></TR><TR><TD>
<TABLE align=left><TBODY><TR><TD>
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>NEA working closely with hawker centres
(1:06)
</TD></TR><TR><TD>
(1:06)
<TABLE align=left><TBODY><TR><TD>
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>Geylang Serai Market closed for spring cleaning
(3:41)
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><!-- Background Story --></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>Not true, stated the National Environment Agency (NEA), saying that the stall's rating had been revised to 'C'. 
(3:41)
On his hygiene record, NEA would say only that no offences have been recorded against him for the last five years.
Mr Allaudin was sombre when he spoke to The Straits Times yesterday morning. He had been wandering aimlessly around the Geylang Serai Temporary Market, which is next to his home in Eunos, casually chatting with other stallholders. Nearby was one of his two sons, both of whom help him run the popular stall with two helpers.
He declined to speak about the incident initially, but changed his mind on Wednesday afternoon.
Mr Allaudin said the first clue he had that something had gone horribly wrong came last Saturday morning, when two men approached him at his stall and berated him for serving their family members tainted food.
He said he was so stunned by their tongue-lashing that he threw away the peanut gravy that he had been preparing for his Indian rojak that day.
Shortly after, he was approached by officers from the NEA, who told him 80 people had come down with food poisoning after eating at his stall.
The stall, described by other stallholders as the main draw of the centre, was then shut, and has to remain so until the authorities allow it to reopen.
On Wednesday, Mr Allaudin dismissed talk that he might have been serving leftovers. He maintained that whatever was left unsold when he closed his stall at 10pm each day was thrown away.
Continuing to plead his innocence, he said: 'I'm just running a business. I had no intention of harming people. I'm very upset.'
He said he has spent most of his time since Saturday cooped up in his four-room flat, afraid that he would be confronted by upset customers.
Asked about the level of hygiene at his stall, he said he prepares and serves rojak 'in a clean manner'.
He said he buys almost all his ingredients from the wet market next door and prepares the dough, fritters and gravy at the stall itself.
He also said he trusted his food suppliers and did not check the produce they delivered to his stall each morning.
He added that the incidents have weighed heavily on him.
'I haven't been able to sleep or eat since Tuesday night. I don't know if I'm going to live or die.'
He would have liked to have been at the funeral of Madam Aminah Samijo, 57, on Tuesday, he said, but was afraid to go.
Asked if he would go to the funeral of the second victim, Madam Norani Kassim, 58, he replied: 'I don't know how her family will react if they see me.
'What can I do? I am so sorry this happened to my customers. I can only leave this matter to God now,' he added.
Investigations, meanwhile, are continuing. All five who work at the stall have given stool and blood samples to the authorities.
Police, as well as officials from the Health Ministry and NEA, have also taken statements from them.
Yesterday morning, more officials descended upon his stall, snapping photographs of its interior.
Mr Allaudin has no idea where all this is going to lead to, but he said he was prepared to face the consequences.
It was clear, though, that what lies ahead for his business was on his mind. Casting a wary eye on the future, he said: 'Customers have told me that my rojak is good but after this, I'm not sure if it will be No. 1 again.'