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Blow to families after staff who served methanol laced drinks that killed Brit lawyer & 5 other backpackers in Laos FLEE

Blow to families after staff who served methanol laced drinks that killed Brit lawyer & 5 other backpackers in Laos FLEE

The Sun30-05-2025

STAFF members who served a Brit backpacker and five other tourists deadly drinks laced with poison in Laos have sparked outrage by fleeing the country.
The cruel twist came after Brit lawyer Simone White, 28, and five others died after consuming methanol-spiked vodka shots at the party hotspot last year.
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According to the Herald Sun, at least two employees who were "detained" following the horrific ordeal have now fled Laos to neighbouring Vietnam.
Tragic Simone was among five other backpackers who also lost their lives after drinking the same fatal beverages.
Bianca Jones and Holly Bowles, both 19 and from Australia, as well as two young women from Denmark, Danes Anne-Sofie Orkild Coyman, 20, and Freja Vennervald Sorensen, 21, and American man James Louis Hutson, 57, were also killed.
All of them were staying at the hostel along with 100 more guests.
After hearing that two of the suspects had fled Laos, Bianca's dad told the Herald Sun: "We want the Australian Government to apply as much pressure as they can to bring justice to all those involved in the methanol poisoning of our girls, the Danish girl and the British girl in Laos."
The group died after they consumed vodka and whiskey laced with deadly methanol at the Nana Backpackers hostel in the town of Vang Vieng last November.
Simone was among the victims after she was rushed to hospital in a near paralytic state before being placed on life support for three days.
Her mum Sue took a hellish 16-hour journey from Kent to Laos after hearing of her daughter's grave condition.
She said she feared Simone would die after being called by the hospital who told her she needed emergency brain surgery.
After arriving at Laos hospital Sue was given the devastating ultimatum over whether to leave her daughter on life support or not.
Brit lawyer Simone White, 28, dies in 'methanol-laced alcohol poisoning' that left 4 others dead in backpacking hotspot
Doctors refused to switch off the machine due to their religion - but told Sue she could do it herself.
The distraught mum said she had to take a tube out of her dying daughter's mouth before making the incredibly painful and "traumatic" decision to switch off the machine.
Simone's official cause of death was confirmed as a bleed on the brain, an inquest heard.
No charges have been made six months after the fatal ordeal, despite Laotian authorities reportedly preparing charges for up to 13 people.
The 13 suspects have been accused of violating food and health security, unlawful business operations and the elimination of evidence, according to the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs.
It comes just weeks after the families of Bianca and Holly, who died from suspected methanol poisoning, slammed cops over "appalling" charges.
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The two teens tragically died just days after the shocking incident.
Holly's mother told 60 Minutes: "[The charges are] pretty appalling, I'd say pretty insulting.'
Bianca's furious mum added: 'I think we're pretty furious about it … Food and beverage.
"You know, that's like? What is that? We don't even know."
The parents also said they had written to Laos Prime Minister Sonexay Siphandone 'a million times'.
The desperate parents claimed to have even contacted his wife, but still say they have not received a response.
Why is methanol so deadly?
By Sam Blanchard, Health Correspondent
METHANOL is a super-toxic version of alcohol that may be present in drinks if added by crooks to make them stronger or if they are brewed or distilled badly.
The consequences can be devastating because as little as a single shot of contaminated booze could be deadly, with just 4ml of methanol potentially enough to cause blindness.
Prof Oliver Jones, a chemist at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, said: 'The body converts methanol to formic acid.
'Formic acid blocks the action of an enzyme that is critical to how the body uses oxygen to generate energy.
'If it stops working, cells cannot take up or use oxygen from the blood and lack of oxygen causes problems in a range of organs as the cells start to die.
'Symptoms of methanol poisoning include vomiting, seizures and dizziness.
'The optic nerve seems to be particularly vulnerable to methanol toxicity, so there is the potential for temporary or permanent blindness, and even death.
'While thankfully rare, methanol poisoning is very serious, and treatment should be given at a hospital.'
An unexpected but key way of treating methanol poisoning is to get the patient drunk with normal alcohol - known as ethanol - to distract the liver and stop it processing the methanol.

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HMP Lowdham Grange: 'Prisoners shouldn't be leaving jail in body bags'
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timean hour ago

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HMP Lowdham Grange: 'Prisoners shouldn't be leaving jail in body bags'

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‘Natasha O'Brien had courage to ruffle feathers and be difficult'

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I want this to be raw, I want people to see everything, I want to let it all hang out.' That was her attitude.' The film was originally envisaged as an investigation of the criminal justice system in Ireland, but soon morphed into something more personal. For Stenson, the associate producer and driving force behind the documentary, O'Brien's charisma dictated that shift. 'Natasha annoys people,' Stenson says. 'She doesn't apologise. That upsets people. It upsets people when a woman demands attention and keeps demanding attention.' Harris, a former Irish Times video journalist, has form in such projects, having previously directed the documentaries Birdsong and Growing Up at the End of the World — both of which wove personal stories together with wider themes, including environmental activism and climate activism. At the film's core are the reverberations that the assault and its aftermath had on O'Brien's life, particularly on her relationship with her mother, Anne, which became visibly strained at points. • Cast convicts out of army, urges Natasha O'Brien 'Those scenes are hard to watch,' Harris admits. 'There is a lot of pain there, but they were willing to put that out there and allow it to be on camera, and we tried to be as delicate with it as we could. It is difficult to watch, but I think it also lets us see how some of this stuff plays out between loved ones. 'At one point in the film, Natasha explicitly talks about the ripple effect of violence and of trauma — she even mentions the taxpayers who had to pay for her medical bills. This isn't something we think about. We think that a victim of crime is the face on the news, but there's a long shadow there,' Harris adds. 'I've worked in news for years,' Stenson says, 'and there are some stories that need to be told in something more than three minutes, and some people who need to be on a bigger screen. 'Natasha is a tough woman but she also has her vulnerabilities. She wants to tell her story but doing so is a form of retraumatisation. Natasha thought that she was going to die during that attack, and in making this documentary we had to ask her to relive that, over and over.' In one especially striking scene O'Brien meets two other victims of gender-based violence, Maev McLoughlin Doyle and Bláthnaid Raleigh, and they discuss the fallout from their respective cases. It portrays them not just as one-dimensional 'victims' but as women who continue to feel the ramifications of their trauma in their everyday lives. It also illustrates how lacking the system is when it comes to supporting victims. 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