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‘Laos methanol cover up’: Australian victims’ families want justice

The families of two Australian teenagers who died of methanol poisoning in Laos are demanding justice for their daughters.

Heartbreaking video of Aussie teens before they died

The families of two Australian teenagers who died of methanol poisoning in Laos are demanding justice amid claims of a cover up by the country’s Communist government.

Bianca Jones and Holly Bowles, both 19, died after drinking tainted vodka shots while on a backpacking holiday in Vang Vieng, Laos, in November.

Holly Bowles.
Holly Bowles.
Bianca Jones.
Bianca Jones.

But speaking out on Sunday, Holly’s parents Sam and Shaun, and Bianca’s parents, Michelle and Mark, vowed they would not rest until they found out who was responsible for their daughters’ deaths.

“I cannot have my daughter’s passing not mean anything,” Mark told 60 Minutes.

“We want some form of closure. We want to understand that people who have done wrong

by our daughter and Holly and the other people are going to be brought to justice.”

The poisonings of the Melbourne teenagers shocked Australia when news broke last year.

Michelle revealed how she was told that Bianca had only a one per cent chance of surviving when they reached a hospital in Udon Thani, Thailand, where she had been transferred.

“Well, I still thought that it was a one per cent (chance). I had to pray that it was one per cent,” she said.

However, Bianca was unable to survive, with Mark revealing they were told that their daughter’s brain had “continued to swell.”

Mark Jones holds onto Zara the family dog at Bianca’s funeral. Picture: NewsWire/Ian Currie.
Mark Jones holds onto Zara the family dog at Bianca’s funeral. Picture: NewsWire/Ian Currie.
Vang Vieng. Picture: David Caird
Vang Vieng. Picture: David Caird

Mark recalled that the doctor said: “We’ll be calling her medically brain dead”.

“So yeah, then we made the decision to turn off all the life support. And then we said our

final goodbye,” Mark said.

Michelle added: “And then she just passed away in my arms.”

That was on November 21 last year.

Shaun and Samantha Bowles at Holly’s funeral.
Shaun and Samantha Bowles at Holly’s funeral.
Police grilled the bartender and manager of the Nana Backpackers Hostel. Picture: David Caird
Police grilled the bartender and manager of the Nana Backpackers Hostel. Picture: David Caird

The following day, Sam and Shaun had to make a similar heartbreaking decision at the Bangkok Hospital where Holly had been transferred by helicopter.

“In a way, we were fortunate to be there with Holly when she passed, which we will

forever be grateful for,” Shaun said.

“And to not have that would’ve been just heartbreaking. It really would’ve been.”

Sam revealed some of the cherished final moments with her daughter.

“We got to brush Holly’s hair. Hold her hands, just hold her. We got to be in the same

room with her.”

Bianca and Holly had been staying at Nana Backpackers in Vang Vieng, a holiday hotspot famous for “tubing” where travellers float down the shallow Nam Song river in tractor inner tubes and stop off at riverbanks bars.

They were among six people who died after drinking free “vodka” shots at the backpackers on November 12.

Danish women Freja Sorensen, 21 and Anne-Sofie Coyman, 20, also died, along with British lawyer Simone White, 28, and American James Louis Hutson, 57.

They were all victims of methanol poisoning – an odourless, tasteless poison that can be fatal with as little as 30ml, or one shot.

The source of the toxic chemical remains unclear despite Laos police arresting 11 people in the weeks after the incident.

No charges have been laid and the Laos Government has failed to provide any details, however a leaked document claimed that the contamination may have occurred at a factory near the Laos capital Vientiane.

The 60 Minutes program, which aired on Sunday, also interviewed the parents of the Danish victims.

Freja Sorensen’s mother Anne-Marie said: “There is a feeling of a cover-up, instead of taking immediate action. Was it a mistake for distillery, was it intent? Was it done by purpose? There, there was, there was no information coming out at that time. And there’s still none.”

stephen.drill@news.com.au

Originally published as ‘Laos methanol cover up’: Australian victims’ families want justice

Original URL: https://www.ntnews.com.au/news/laos-methanol-cover-up-australian-victims-families-want-justice/news-story/e0e0906d77396ef6dcfaca955e312c75