It has been three years since Hannah Powell woke up to realise that she had lost her sight after a bar crawl with two friends in Zante, Greece, and still no responsibility has been taken.

Hannah, now 23, had been ordering and drinking vodka which was - unbeknown to her - mixed with deadly methanol.

Hannah realised what was happening when she woke up and thought the lights in her hotel room were off. Following this, her kidneys shut down and she went blind.

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Speaking to BBC Radio 1 Newsbeat, she said: "I suggested we open the curtains and my friends said they were already open. I just thought they were joking so I got up to turn the light on.

"That's when I started to panic because that's when I realised it was on and I just couldn't see anything."

Hannah on holiday in Zante. Credit: RNIB

Hospital tests confirmed that Hannah had toxic methanol poisoning after being served unregulated vodka. Three years on and still no responsibility has been taken for what happened.

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Hannah believes that unsafe alcohol is still being sold in party resorts, adding: "The fact that no-one wants to take responsibility, I didn't expect them to, but I think someone should.

"Either the bar knew they had dodgy alcohol or someone made the dodgy alcohol. Either way, it was nothing to do with me and I wouldn't have drank it if I knew."

Hannah's mum told The Sun: "I hope whoever put methanol in my daughter's drink to make a few quid realises the dreadful consequences. I hope one day they are brought to justice."

Hannah was determined to lead a normal life after losing her sight. Credit: RNIB

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As well as losing her sight, the medical receptionist was relying on dialysis. That was until her mum went under the knife to donate her a kidney.

Hannah from North Ormesby, Teesside, told The Sun: "Since that holiday my life has been unimaginably tough. Not only have I been left blind but I've been reliant on machines to keep my kidneys going.

"We have always been close but I would never have imagined that one day mum would save my life. Now we have the ultimate bond. My mum is my hero."

Sight loss charity, Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB), supported Hannah when it came to returning to work by providing her with equipment such as magnifiers to help her read again.

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