KFC in the UK probes faeces found in drink's ice
Faecal contamination of the ice increased the risk of getting sick for anyone consuming it, says expert

Fast-food chain KFC has launched an investigation into one if its U.K. restaurants after a researcher working for the BBC was served ice that contained bacteria from faeces.
Margarita Gomez Escalada, a senior lecturer from Leeds Beckett University, studied a sample taken from a restaurant in Birmingham. The findings were part of a wider investigation of several big-name takeaways and coffee shops and were broadcast by the BBC's "Rip Off Britain".
"We found high levels of bacteria in the ice," she told the television program, adding that the bacteria increased the risk of anyone who consumed the ice becoming ill.
"The presence of faecal coliform suggests that there's faecal contamination either on the water that made the ice, or the ice itself, and so it increases the risk of getting sick from consuming this ice."
Most of the test samples that were taken turned up with low and harmless levels of bacteria, the BBC program reported.
A spokesperson for KFC in the U.K. said it had launched its own investigation for this particular restaurant, which had since been re-inspected and awarded the highest rating of five out of five by the U.K.'s Environmental Health Office. The food chain added that the investigation was no longer ongoing, but said that all stores are subjected to its own unannounced independent audits.