A convicted assassin serving a life sentence in Australia is difficult a ban on prisoners consuming Vegemite – the polarising, salty unfold that has change into a nationwide image.
State authorities say inmates might use the strong-smelling condiment to disguise contraband substances or brew alcohol behind bars.
However Andre McKechnie argues that the ban, in place within the state of Victoria since 2006, denies him the appropriate to “get pleasure from his tradition as an Australian”, in line with courtroom paperwork seen by AFP and AP.
McKechnie was handed a life sentence for stabbing a property developer to dying in Queensland within the Nineteen Nineties. He served a part of his sentence in Queensland earlier than being transferred to Victoria.
In his lawsuit in opposition to Victoria’s Division of Justice and Corrections, the company managing the state’s prisons, the 54-year-old stated he wished the Vegemite ban overturned.
He additionally needs jail authorities to declare that they “failed to supply meals satisfactory to take care of [his] wellbeing”.
The case is scheduled for trial subsequent yr, AP reported.
A much-loved breakfast unfold for some, Vegemite has acquired controversial accolades because it first hit store cabinets in Australia in 1923.
The thick, brown condiment – made primarily from yeast extract – was invented within the Victorian capital of Melbourne greater than a century in the past as a substitute for the British unfold Marmite.
In 2022, Melbourne declared the scent of Vegemite wafting from a manufacturing facility within the metropolis a “vital” facet of the town’s cultural heritage.
Nonetheless, the condiment’s polarising style has landed it within the Disgusting Meals Museum in Sweden – alongside natto, pungent tofu and monkey brains.
Vegemite sparked a global dispute in April this yr when an Australian cafe proprietor in Canada was advised to take away jars of the condiment from his cabinets because it didn’t adjust to native well being rules.
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese intervened within the row, saying it was “fairly odd” that Canada allowed the sale of Vegemite’s “garbage” rival product Marmite. The Canadian company quickly modified course and allowed the cafe proprietor to proceed promoting the unfold.










