World | E. coli 16 Dead as Europe's E. Coli Outbreak Spreads Hard-hit Germany blames cucumbers from Spain By John Johnson Posted May 31, 2011 7:48 AM CDT Copied A street vendor stands next to cucumbers on sale in Berlin on Monday. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber) A deadly E. coli outbreak in Europe linked to tainted cucumbers and other vegetables is getting worse, report the Wall Street Journal and AP: The toll: Sixteen people are dead (15 in Germany and one woman in Sweden who had just traveled to Germany); more than 1,000 people are sick in Germany alone, with 373 having the most serious form of E. coli. Hundreds more cases are reported throughout Europe. The source: Germany blames cucumbers from Spain, specifically the Almeria and Malaga regions. A third batch from the Netherlands or Denmark is under investigation. Spain angrily denies being the source, and EU officials say the vegetables could have become tainted anywhere along the supply chain. The fallout: Russia has banned some imports from Spain and Germany (and may expand it to all EU nations); Italy, Austria, and other nations have stopped short of that but are ramping up inspections at supermarkets. Read These Next Don Lemon has been arrested in LA after a Minneapolis protest. Schitt's Creek star Catherine O'Hara has died at 71. Costco roasted over its rotisserie chickens in lawsuit. Teens sue an elite private school and an ex-Jeopardy! champ. Report an error