Four members of a family died in Mumbai’s Govandi area after eating a meal of biryani and watermelon, triggering a police investigation into potential food poisoning.
The victims, including two children, fell ill late Tuesday night shortly after their dinner. By Wednesday morning, the situation turned fatal.
The deceased—identified as 40-year-old Firoz Khan, his wife, and two of their children—were rushed to Rajawadi Hospital after suffering severe vomiting and abdominal pain. Doctors pronounced all four dead upon arrival. Two other family members remain hospitalized, where their condition is currently reported as stable but under observation.
Neighbors told local reporters the family ordered the biryani from a nearby eatery. Police have since sealed the restaurant and collected food samples for forensic analysis.
“We are waiting for the autopsy reports to confirm the exact cause of death,” said a senior official at the Deonar police station. “Right now, we are treating it as a case of suspected food poisoning, but we haven’t ruled out other possibilities like water contamination or something else consumed in the house.”
The incident has shaken the Govandi neighborhood, a densely populated area where street food is a staple for most residents. Local health officials have begun inspecting nearby food stalls to ensure basic hygiene standards are being met, though no other reports of illness have surfaced from the same establishment so far.
For now, the family’s home remains cordoned off as investigators sift through the remnants of the meal. The final forensic results, expected within 48 hours, will determine whether this was a tragic accident linked to a single batch of tainted food or a systemic failure in local food safety oversight.
