A warning has been issued as nearly 30 people in the UK have been struck down in a Salmonella outbreak.
The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) carried out testing which revealed that cherry tomatoes from Sicily, Italy, were the origin of the infection. Other countries infected include Germany, Austria and France.
Officials based at the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control stressed that the risk of further infection will continue whilst contaminated seasonal produce is delivered.
READ MORE: Dad collapses and dies at son's funeral as coffin is carried into chapel
READ MORE: Worst performing NHS hospitals ‘named and shamed’ in league table - check your area
They said: "New outbreaks are likely to occur in future seasons until the root cause of the contamination has been identified and control measures implemented."
The ECDC added that foodborne illnesses are more frequent between June and October.
"The recurrence of cases in 2025, including those without travel history, suggests ongoing transmission and distribution of contaminated produce beyond Italy," officials said.
"The presence of cases in multiple countries underscores the need for continued surveillance and cross-sector coordinated response."
This is a breaking news story. Follow us on Google News, Flipboard, Apple News, Twitter, Facebook or visit The Mirror homepage.
You may also like
'Highest state of readiness': Poland scrambles jets after Russian drones enter airspace; four airports shut
Nationwide SIR: ECI to hold crucial meeting on Wednesday
Navy Nagar breach: Fake guard threw rifle across wall to aide
Lights, Solar, Action: How a Mira Road society slashed electricty bill by 65% - from Rs 52,000 monthly to Rs 18,000
Su From So released on OTT: Is JP Thuminad's horror comedy getting a Tamil remake? Where to watch Kannada hit movie online