
Free booze killed our pal & sister… people are bottling this poison for tourists and we need to flag the warning signs
LIFTING her drink, Bethany Clarke clinked glasses with her best friend Simone White and they each took a swig.
The vodka and lemonade, which the girls had been given for free at Nana Backpacker Hostel in Vang Vieng, Laos, tasted weak, but they assumed it had been watered down.
6
6
The childhood friends, from Orpington, Kent, enjoyed five more freebie drinks during the hostel's happy hour, blissfully unaware that within 24 hours, they would both be critically ill.
Nine days later, on November 21 last year, 28-year-old Simone died in hospital. She was one of six tourists to lose their lives following a methanol poisoning.
'It's hard to put into words how horrendous it was,' says Bethany, a podiatrist who now lives in Brisbane. 'It was the worst period of my life. I could not understand how we'd gone from having a few drinks in a bar together, to this."
Along with Simone, Holly Bowles and Bianca Jones, both 19 and from Australia, Anne-Sofie Orkild Coyman, 20, and Freja Vennervald Sorensen, 21, from Denmark, and American James Louis Hutson, 57, also lost their lives.
This shocking case is just one of a number of methanol poisoning incidents in popular backpacker destinations, such as Indonesia, Laos and Vietnam, in recent months.
The issue mainly affects poorer countries, where law enforcement is under-resourced and there are few regulations around food and alcohol standards.
In Southeast Asia, there is also an industry of home-brewed alcohol, which can lead to accidental poisonings.
Experts have warned that the true scope of the problem is unknown. Fiona Chuah, methanol poisoning initiative team lead at Doctors Without Borders, says: 'Without a comprehensive national and international surveillance and reporting system, the prevalence is likely under reported.
'Many cases go unrecognised, because symptoms – which often appear 12 to 24 hours after ingestion – such as headache, nausea, dizziness and visual disturbances, are often mistaken for hangovers, food poisoning or other illnesses, and this then delays critical treatment.'
Bethany and Simone met at primary school and had previously travelled together to countries including Thailand and China, before planning their two-and-a-half-week trip for November 2024.
Brit lawyer Simone White, 28, dies in 'methanol-laced alcohol poisoning' that left 4 others dead in backpacking hotspot
They met up in Phnom Penh in Cambodia, before arriving in Vang Vieng in Laos on November 11.
They spent the next day 'tubing' – a bar crawl using inflatables along a river – before joining a friend, Daniel*, for free vodka shots at the hostel, which they mixed with Sprite.
'There was a nice vibe,' Bethany recalls.
'We had been drinking in random bars in places like Bali and Thailand before and not seen it as a risk.'
After around two hours, the trio left, feeling 'not particularly drunk'.
The next morning, they joined a kayaking excursion.
'We all felt a bit off, but fine,' Bethany says.
'It just seemed like a bad hangover.'
That night, the trio boarded a minibus to make the two-hour journey to Laos' capital, Vientiane, during which Simone was sick and Bethany fainted.
The driver dropped them at a public hospital, where medics wrongly suspected food poisoning or drug use and gave them IV fluids via a drip.
Soon after, Simone's condition worsened.
The group were transferred to a private hospital where, at around 11.30pm – 26 hours after drinking the shots – tests showed methanol poisoning.
'I was drifting in and out of consciousness, but also trying to advocate for Simone and keep an eye on all our possessions,' Bethany recalls.
'I still hoped it would all be OK.
'I even thought we might be able to carry on with the holiday.'
The next day, Bethany and Daniel, whose condition had stabilised, were moved to another ward and told that Simone was sedated but also improving.
Bethany contacted her friend's mum Sue, 61, and explained Simone was feeling a bit better.
In the meantime, Bethany's worried family offered to travel out to be with her, but she refused.
'I had no idea how long we would be in hospital, or that Simone wouldn't survive,' she says.
Later, as Sue was preparing to fly 16 hours from the UK, Bethany had to contact her again, as Simone had deteriorated and needed consent for brain surgery.
Sue arrived in Laos just ahead of the operation, but sadly it was unsuccessful. Six days later, her life support was switched off.
'I was in denial. None of us could believe what had happened,' says Bethany, who flew back to the UK with Sue and Daniel that same evening.
Simone was repatriated days later, and her funeral was held in December.
'Afterwards, I had to keep talking about what had happened as I tried to understand it. I wondered if it had been me who had picked up the 'bad' drinks and given them to Simone,' says Bethany.
'I'm smaller than her and I have epilepsy, so how did I come out of it OK?
'It was a lot for my family to cope with, too.
'For them, I nearly died as well.'
DEADLY HOMEBREW
Methanol can affect people differently, depending on the mix of the drink and how an individual metabolises it, explains Dr Knut Erik Hovda, technical consultant at the Methanol Poisoning Institute (MPi), a Doctors Without Borders initiative.
'It is not the methanol itself that is toxic, but the metabolite – the end product. Depending on the exact amount of methanol in the drink, as well as how much regular alcohol – which acts as an antidote – is present, people may respond differently,' he says.
After news of the first two deaths – those of Bianca and Australian Holly Bowles – broke, the manager of Nana Backpacker Hostel, Duong Duc Toan, confirmed the girls had drunk free shots there, but denied that his vodka made them sick, insisting it was bought from legitimate sellers.
Eight staff members were arrested in November, and as of last month, the hostel remains closed. The investigation is ongoing, and no charges have been reported.
6
6
The mass deaths, which attracted global headlines, brought back painful memories for Measha Rudge, whose sister Cheznye Emmons, 23, died in Indonesia in 2013 in similar circumstances.
'So many have died'
Measha, 38, has been raising awareness about the dangers of counterfeit alcohol through her Save A Life campaign in memory of beautician Cheznye.
'It's heartbreaking that so many have died since Chez,' says Measha, a teacher from Shoebury, Essex.
Cheznye was on a six-month trip around Southeast Asia with boyfriend Joe Cook when she drank shop-bought 'gin' – which came in a sealed bottle – in Sumatra.
After she became sick and lost her vision, medics diagnosed her with methanol poisoning and put her in an induced coma, but she passed away five days later.
'It was horrendous,' Measha says.
'Chez was my best friend.
'She always had a smile on her face, always tried to make people happy.'
In late 2013, Measha's dad Brenton travelled to Sumatra with the BBC's Fake Britain and discovered that shops were still selling bootleg gin at a low cost.
'In Indonesia, the alcohol tax is really high, so some locals brew it themselves,' Measha says.
'You would believe the packaging is real and it's not.
'People are just bottling up this crap, and nobody is ever held to account.'
In the aftermath of Cheznye's death, Measha and her family liaised with the UK government about an awareness campaign.
They produced posters to be shared in NHS clinics for people getting vaccinations before travelling to Southeast Asia, and had warnings added to the FCDO website for countries where consuming counterfeit alcohol is a risk.
Counterfeit cocktails
But over the years, interest has waned.
Measha says most clinics declined to display the posters, and warnings are not prominent enough for tourists.
'You have young people fresh out of school or university who are going to go to Southeast Asia to enjoy themselves. And none of them are thinking they shouldn't take free or cheap drinks. We need to make the risks clear.'
This was the case for Ashley King, who was 18 when she went blind after drinking a counterfeit cocktail during a night out in Kuta, Bali, in March 2011.
She began feeling 'disoriented and nauseous' the following evening, after taking a flight to New Zealand and arriving at her hostel in Christchurch.
The next morning, she noticed the lighting was 'dim' in her room and, soon after, she found herself struggling to breathe.
'Someone from the hostel took me to a clinic. By the time I arrived, I couldn't see the nurse's fingers,' Ashley, now 32, remembers.
She was rushed to hospital, where tests showed she had methanol poisoning.
'They told my family to get on the first flight out, because they thought I might not make it,' she says.
In denial
Ashley awoke the next day in ICU and, two days later, she was moved to a regular ward, but still couldn't see.
A few days later, doctors confirmed her optic nerves were dying and her eyesight would not return.
'I started crying,' she recalls.
'I thought my life was over, that I'd never have a career, fall in love or go to university.'
Medics asked if she wanted to file a police report, but she declined, thinking there was no point – a decision she now regrets.
She was treated in New Zealand for a month before returning to her home in Calgary, Canada.
'I would lie to friends and say I was getting my eyesight back,' she says.
'I refused to use a cane and hated asking for help.
'I was angry, sad and resentful.'
Prevention not treatment
She spent three years 'in denial', before deciding at 21 to study journalism at university and, later, acting.
She eventually landed a job in theatre admin, then won a grant to develop a play about her experience called Static: A Party Girl's Memoir, which she performed last year at a theatre in Calgary.
She has now adapted the show into a podcast.
'Methanol poisoning was the most traumatic thing that's happened to me, but I'm proud I've been able to reclaim the narrative,' she says.
Ashley had hoped to be 'an anomaly' and is horrified by the recent surge in methanol poisoning incidents.
Other cases have included Brit Greta Marie Otteson, 33, and her South African fiancé Els Arno Quinton, 36, who were found dead in Hoi An, Vietnam, on Boxing Day last year after allegedly drinking methanol-laced limoncello.
Likewise, in January, 33 people died and another 43 were hospitalised after methanol poisoning at a holiday hot spot in Istanbul, Turkey. Four people have been arrested.
Since methanol can't be detected by sight, smell or taste, Doctors Without Borders' Fiona Chuah recommends avoiding any home-made alcoholic drinks or those from questionable sources.
'Purchase alcohol from licensed stores, bars and hotels, or other reputable sources, and stick to well-known brands,' she says.
'Always check seals are intact and inspect labels for poor print quality or incorrect spelling.
'Exceptionally low prices can be a red flag.'
6
Four months on from Simone's death, Bethany says she is not holding out hope for justice for her friend.
'I don't have much faith, as the communication from authorities has been poor,' she says.
Instead, she is determined to educate others about the dangers of counterfeit alcohol, and has launched a petition calling for the issue to be included in the school curriculum.
''Steer clear, drink beer' is the message that we're pushing – fake spirits can look very convincing in some of the countries where methanol poisoning is a problem,' Bethany explains.
'We need to focus on prevention, rather than treatment.
'I've lost the most important person in my life to methanol poisoning.
'All we can do for her now is to raise awareness and try to save others.'
Sign the petition to put the dangers of methanol poisoning on the school curriculum at Petition.parliament.uk/petitions/716935.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
2 days ago
- The Independent
Malaysia records first Covid death of 2025
Malaysia saw its first Covid death of 2025 earlier this month, health authorities said. The health ministry noted that this was the first Covid fatality since 26 May last year. The deceased had heart disease and diabetes and hadn't taken a second booster shot. 'This marks a significant decline compared to 57 Covid deaths reported in 2024, with the last fatality recorded on May 26 last year,' the ministry said in a statement on Thursday. From January to 15 June this year, Malaysia recorded 21,738 cumulative Covid cases, with the weekly average holding at about 900, The Rakyat Post reported. The ministry reported a sharp 68 per cent week-on-week increase with 3,379 cases from 8 to 15 June compared to 2,011 the week prior. Despite the rise, the ministry stressed the national situation remained stable and well below the alert threshold. At least six individuals with underlying health conditions had been admitted to ICU. 'All cases were closely monitored with care, with all patients discharged from the ICUs. Four were allowed to return home, with two transferred to normal wards,' the ministry said. The new Nimbus Covid strain (NB.1.8.1) is rapidly spreading around the world and is being closely monitored by the World Health Organisation. This strain is linked to a rise in infections in several parts of Asia, including India, Hong Kong, Thailand, and Singapore. First recognised in January 2025, NB.1.8.1, an omicron variant, is now the dominant variant in China and Hong Kong. It has also spread to the US and Australia. ' SARS-CoV-2 continues to evolve, and between January and May 2025, there were shifts in global SARS-CoV-2 variant dynamics,' a WHO spokesperson said earlier. 'At the beginning of the year, the most prevalent variant tracked by WHO at the global level was XEC, followed by KP.3.1.1. In February, circulation of XEC began to decline while that of LP.8.1 increased, with the latter becoming the most detected variant in mid-March. Since mid-April, the circulation of LP.8.1 has been slightly declining as NB.1.8.1 is increasingly being detected.' By late April, NB.1.8.1 comprised about 10.7 per cent of submitted sequences globally, according to the WHO, up from just 2.5 per cent a month before. The WHO has designated Nimbus as a Variant Under Monitoring. Preliminary data suggests that Nimbus spreads more rapidly than earlier variants. Reported symptoms commonly include a sharp, razor-like sore throat, fatigue, mild cough, fever, muscle aches, and nasal congestion. However, the public health risk posed by this variant is evaluated as low at the global level. 'Despite a concurrent increase in cases and hospitalisations in some countries where NB.1.8.1 is widespread, current data don't indicate that this variant leads to more severe illness than other variants in circulation,' the WHO said. Although it may not be particularly severe, Nimbus may infect people more easily than earlier variants. There's some evidence that the variant binds more tightly to human cells. The ministry of health urged all Malaysians to stay protected by adhering to the recommended vaccination schedules outlined in the National Immunisation Programme.


The Sun
3 days ago
- The Sun
I drank 4 bottles of wine a day after getting dumped, not even AA or a broken face could stop me…a call changed it all
MY world fell apart on New Year's Eve 2008 when my fiance of six years told me he didn't love me anymore. I moved out of his flat that we shared the next day - heartbroken and lost. I didn't know what to do with the emotional pain, so I drank. 7 7 My relationship with alcohol quickly shifted from something social to a desperate coping mechanism. Nights were spent in a local pub with friends, and bottles of wine consumed with my mum Caroline until the anger or sadness passed. I wouldn't go out sober. Drinking felt essential. It gave me confidence, made me feel fun. But things began to spiral. I lost my job at New Look not long after. Someone had complained I smelled of alcohol. That part wasn't upheld - but instead of seeing it as a warning sign, I used it as justification. I told myself it was their fault I'd lost my job. It didn't stop me drinking - I drank more. In the jobs that followed, mainly in retail, I'd count down the hours until I could get home and pour a glass of wine. I was high-functioning enough that no one really knew. Or, at least, no one said anything. By 2015, I started hiding bottles of booze. That's when I knew, deep down, that something wasn't right. But I convinced myself it was no one else's business. I was living at my mum's while saving to move to Cambodia. I drank 7 bottles of vodka & 30 glasses of wine a week- I smashed teeth & was fired for being drunk, the booze broke me A friend had told me it was really nice and I thought a change of country might change me. But one night I came home from drinking, and my mum had lined up all the empty booze bottles on the kitchen side. There were about 15. She had found them shoved at the back of my wardrobe. I still remember the look on her face. There was no shouting - just quiet heartbreak. Moving to Cambodia on my own in 2016 gave me total freedom - but it also gave me a deep sense of loneliness. I was teaching English as a foreign language to young children, and lived with a woman from New Zealand in an apartment in Phnom Penh. But my behaviour didn't change. One night I'd ended up at a casino with a group of men I'd met in a bar, phone dead, no way for anyone to reach me. My housemate panicked so called my mum. I thought they were overreacting. That was my mindset. I hoped coming back to the UK after a year would fix me - but even on the flight back, and drinking a beer at the airport, I knew it wouldn't. 7 I got my own place, which meant there was no one around to see what I was doing. My mum tried to talk to me gently about it sometimes, and I'd make these half-hearted promises to cut down. But the truth is, living alone made it way too easy to carry on. Then came Christmas 2018 when I was 38. I was working in a pub, and after one of my shifts, I drank way too much. I ended up drink-driving home. I don't even remember doing it. My colleagues were so concerned they called the police. But again, I didn't see the danger - or my own responsibility. I blamed them. In my head, I was the victim. I never went back to that job but I also didn't drive again until I got sober in 2019, so a part of me knew. What to do if you think are an alcoholic IF you're struggling with alcohol addiction, the most important thing is to recognise the problem and seek support - You don't have to face it alone. Seek Professional Help GP or Doctor – A medical professional can assess your situation and provide advice on treatment options. Therapists or Counsellors – Talking to an addiction specialist can help address underlying causes and develop coping strategies. Rehab or Detox Programmes – If physical dependence is severe, medically supervised detox may be necessary. Consider Support Groups Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) – A well-known 12-step programme that provides peer support. SMART Recovery – A science-based alternative to AA, focusing on self-empowerment. Local Support Groups – Many communities have groups tailored to different needs. By the end, I was drinking between three and four bottles of wine a day. That had become my normal. I didn't even think it was excessive - it was just what I needed to get through the day. I stopped going out as much because it was easier to drink at home. When I did go out, I'd usually end up black-out drunk. I'd fall over, lose my keys, wake up in places I had no memory of ever going. It became too risky, too unpredictable. So I started choosing the sofa, a bottle - or four - and my own little bubble of self-pity. Eventually, I couldn't do anything without a drink in me. I needed at least two glasses of wine just to get ready for work because my hands would be shaking so much. I isolated myself a lot because I was trying so hard to hide what was really going on, as I didn't want to face questions from friends or family. I wasn't in a romantic relationship during that time. But I was promiscuous. I had a lot of one-night stands, thinking they'd somehow make me feel better. They didn't. I'd wake up filled with shame and self-loathing, and then use that as another excuse to drink. 7 7 In the summer of 2018, I experienced what should have been a rock bottom moment. That was when I fractured my face after a fall while drunk. But it wasn't. Not yet. I had to stop drinking for eight days while I was on antibiotics. But, the following week I celebrated by drinking again. A reward. I knew then I was in trouble. I went to my first AA meeting in January 2019. I was drunk when I went. I don't even remember much about it, but that was the first time I admitted something was wrong - even if I wasn't ready to deal with it yet. Alcohol and addiction had affected my confidence, my sense of self, my ability to trust my own thoughts. I stopped making plans for the future. I lived day-to-day, hour-to-hour, bottle-to-bottle. It robbed me of time. And, it impacted my health - my body was exhausted, my hands shook, I sweated constantly, my anxiety was through the roof. But I didn't care - my main concern was hiding the truth, from others, and most importantly, from myself. I told lies. I lived a double life: the version I showed the world and the one that sat at home pouring another glass. 7 The moment it all stopped wasn't loud or dramatic. It was May 2019, and I passed out at work working as a store manager of a retail shop. I was drinking all day, every day - even at work. When they found me unconscious, I felt pure shame. But still not surprised. At the same time, I was also in therapy, trying to cope without actually telling my therapist I was still drinking. Years of buried pain came up - heartbreak, my parents' divorce, the fallout from my cancelled wedding. I had no idea how to cope. So I drank more. But, that day, something cracked. I didn't want to live like this anymore. But I didn't want to die either. I'd been given the number for the Samaritans, and I called them. That call saved my life. After that, I rang my mum and told her I needed help. My mum suggested rehab. And four days later, I was in. Now, I've been sober for six years, since 8 May 2019. If I'm honest, I haven't found my recovery that hard - not in the way people expect. I accepted very early on that I just couldn't drink. I loved rehab. I soaked up everything. I started going to 12-step meetings and worked through a programme. The real shift came in October 2020, when I finally shared on social media that I was in recovery. I was tired of pretending. And the outpouring of love and 'me too' messages flipped something in my mind. Maybe I didn't have to hide. That's when I began helping others - and helping others helped me. That's how it works. On the outside, the changes are obvious - I look healthier, I show up, I've built a business. In 2022, I decided to write a book to help others. How Did I Get Here: Building A Life Beyond Alcohol wasn't just about sharing my story - it was about telling the truth. Even when I got sober, there weren't enough stories that talked about the identity crisis, the grief, the rediscovery, the unlearning, the rising. I wanted women to know they weren't broken. Drinking has been normalised, glamourised, romanticised to the point where not drinking makes you the weird one. But here's the truth: you don't need alcohol to have fun, to fit in, or to survive the day. And once you realise that, once you live that - you start to see the lie for what it is.


The Sun
4 days ago
- The Sun
Mum who died of rabies after petting stray dog on holiday is pictured as family pay tribute to ‘heart of the family'
THE family of British mum who died after being scratched by a stray puppy while on a holiday in Morocco have paid a heartbreaking tribute. Yvonne Ford, from Barnsley, South Yorkshire, unknowingly contracted rabies following the incident in February - before falling ill this month, her daughter says. 5 5 5 Her death has led to an urgent warning from the UK Health and Security Agency today. Yvonne's daughter Robyn Thomson said in a Facebook post on Tuesday: "Two weeks ago she became ill, starting with a headache and resulted in her losing her ability to walk, talk, sleep, swallow. Resulting in her passing." She went on to say: "She was scratched very slightly by a puppy in Morocco in February. "At the time, she did not think any harm would come of it and didn't think much of it." Robyn added: "Our family is still processing this unimaginable loss, but we are choosing to speak up in the hope of preventing this from happening to others." In another post, she referred to her mum by the nickname "Bon" and said: "She was the heart of our family—strong, loving, and endlessly supportive. "No words can fully capture the depth of our loss or the impact she had on all of us. "We are heartbroken, but also grateful for every moment we had with her." On Sunday, Robyn shared a clip of Yvonne dancing with her grandchildren "just under two weeks before we lost mum". It comes after the UK Health and Security Agency (UKHSA) confirmed a Brit had died, and said her close contacts "are being assessed and offered vaccination when necessary". A statement added: "Rabies is passed on through injuries such as bites and scratches from an infected animal. "It is nearly always fatal, but post-exposure treatment is very effective at preventing disease if given promptly after exposure to the virus." Dr Katherine Russell, Head of Emerging Infections and Zoonoses at UKHSA, said: "I would like to extend my condolences to this individual's family at this time. "If you are bitten, scratched or licked by an animal in a country where rabies is found then you should wash the wound or site of exposure with plenty of soap and water and seek medical advice without delay in order to get post-exposure treatment to prevent rabies. "There is no risk to the wider public in relation to this case. "Human cases of rabies are extremely rare in the UK, and worldwide there are no documented instances of direct human-to-human transmission." 5 5 What rabies does to the body and how it's treated Rabies is known as a deadly virus that is typically spread through a bite or scratch from an infected animal. The infection is common worldwide but is predominantly found in Asia, Africa, and Central and South America. Some of the animals that are most likely to spread the disease are dogs, bats, foxes, skunks and raccoons. Symptoms After a bite or other rabies exposure, the virus can take weeks or months to start causing symptoms. This timeframe is what doctors call the incubation period in which the virus is travelling through the body and to the brain. Some of the most common symptoms of rabies include: Fever Headache Excess salivation Muscle spasms paralysis mental confusion The World Health Organization describes two main manifestations of the disease: furious rabies and paralytic rabies. People or animals with furious rabies may appear agitated, become aggressive, and drool excessively, while other symptoms include hyperactivity, fear of water, and even fear of fresh air. The symptoms of paralytic rabies, on the other hand, are more understated—typically causing gradual paralysis as a patient remains calm and lucid. Treatment If you've been bitten or scratched by an animal in an area with a risk of rabies you should immediately clean the wound with running water and soap for several minutes. After this, you must disinfect the wound with an alcohol- or iodine-based disinfectant and apply a simple dressing. After the wound is addressed, you should see a doctor as soon as possible and they will determine if you need a rabies vaccination or not. Post-exposure treatment is nearly 100 per cent effective if it's started before any symptoms of rabies appear. Some cases will require immunoglobulin, which is administered into and around the wound. This provides short-term protection if there is a significant chance of infection in the wound. Treatment should ideally begin within a few hours of being bitten, but can be delayed up to 24 hours if needed.