.
A number of funerals have been held across the district as family members mourn the loss of their relatives.
"Four people have been identified who prepared and distributed the toxic liquor," senior police official Atif Imran, who is investigating the case, told AFP, adding the group had also consumed the alcohol themselves.
"One of them died because of the liquor, two others are in critical condition while the fourth is in police custody," he added.
The suspect in police custody had confessed to preparing the brew by mixing it with 20 litres of aftershave and other chemicals.
The development was confirmed by another senior police official Usman Akram Gondal.
Though legal breweries exist in Pakistan, alcohol sales and consumption are banned for Muslims and tightly regulated for minorities and foreigners.
While wealthy Pakistanis buy foreign alcohol on the black market at heavily inflated prices, the poor often resort to home brews that can contain methanol, commonly used in anti-freeze and fuel.
Earlier this month it was reported that at least 41 people in a Russian city died after knocking back scented bath oil in a desperate search for booze.
Use of bootleg booze is rife in Russia’s regions, where two years of economic pain have left some people destitute.
Russian media reported that the victims were poor residents of Irkutsk, a hard scrabble city around 2,600 miles east of Moscow.
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