Indonesia’s deadliest bootleg liquor crisis in years has killed at least 90 people, authorities said Tuesday, prompting the capital of West Java, Bandung, to declare a state of emergency. Deaths from such consumption are reported frequently, but the latest toll is among the highest in recent years. In 2016, at least 24 people died after drinking illegally-produced alcohol. Most Indonesians practice a moderate form of Islam and alcohol is available in big cities, but high taxes make it expensive and poorly paid workers sometimes turn to cheap but potentially dangerous homemade alcohol. In 2015, the county banned sales of alcohol from tens of thousands of mini-marts and other small stores.