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Aussie teen dies in Bangkok after Laos poisoning, 4 dead


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Posted

Screenshot-2024-11-21-131916-modified-1.png

 

One of the Melbourne teenagers on an idyllic backpacking adventure in Asia has died in a Bangkok hospital from a suspected methanol poisoning incident in Laos.

 

Bianca Jones, a 19 year old Australian tourist, became the latest person to die from a suspected methanol poisoning incident in Laos after drinking vodka shots. The Aussie teen’s death is the fourth in just over a week, with police scrambling to investigate the deadly trend sweeping the town of Vang Vieng.

 

Jones’ family confirmed the tragic news today, November 21, just hours after the US State Department revealed an American man had also died in the same area. Meanwhile, two young Danish women, aged 19 and 20, met a similar fate last week, sparking fears that a batch of toxic, bootleg alcohol could be to blame.

 

Jones’ friend, 19 year old Holly Bowles, is currently in critical condition in Bangkok, along with a British woman, as both fight for their lives on life support.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese expressed his sorrow for the teenager’s death.

 

“Our first thoughts at this moment are with her family and friends who are grieving a terrible and cruel loss. This is every parent’s very worst fear and a nightmare that no one should have to endure.”

 

 

Jones and Bowles were reportedly staying at the Nana Backpacker Hostel in Vang Vieng, where the hostel manager told the Associated Press that over 100 guests were offered free shots of Lao vodka.

 

The manager said no other guests reported health issues but confirmed the hostel has now ceased giving out free alcohol amid the police investigation.

 

Australian and UK police have issued urgent warnings to travellers about the dangers of methanol poisoning in Laos, advising caution when consuming alcohol in the country.

 

Methanol, unlike ethanol found in standard alcoholic drinks, is highly toxic and often used by bootleggers to increase alcohol content cheaply but with lethal results.

 

In recent years, methanol poisonings have claimed lives across the globe, with mass deaths reported in India, the Philippines, and Peru, reported BBC News.

 

Jones’ family has requested privacy as they mourn, thanking supporters for the “overwhelming support, love, and prayers.”

 

By Puntid Tantivangphaisal

Photo courtesy of Herald Sun via Yahoo News

 

Source: The Thaiger

-- 2024-11-21

 

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Posted
2 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

is highly toxic and often used by bootleggers to increase alcohol content cheaply

 

Nonsense. It's added by poisoners who want to kill people.


 

 

 

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Posted
1 hour ago, richard_smith237 said:

 

This was obviously a tragic mistake - where bootleggers screwed up...   but the real issue is that so much bootlegged booze is allowed in the first place.

 

The article specifically states this :

"Methanol, unlike ethanol found in standard alcoholic drinks, is highly toxic and often used by bootleggers to increase alcohol content cheaply but with lethal results."


which implies it was added deliberately by someone and that this is a normal kind of thing for bootleggers to do. It's not.

Why would someone do this deliberately?

 

Well it's been done before by a government (10,000 dead from it) I might add, see here : https://slate.com/technology/2010/02/the-little-told-story-of-how-the-u-s-government-poisoned-alcohol-during-prohibition.html

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Posted
9 hours ago, ukrules said:

 

Nonsense. It's added by poisoners who want to kill people.


 

 

 

I don't think so that Laotians did it intentionally to kill these young women. 

The incident might have happened by mistakes during distillation or any lack of knowledge about Methanol.

But we don't know the circumstances.

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Posted

It happened here too - remember a few months back?  

 

 

"The number of people killed from drinking herbal liquor spiked with a composition of methyl alcohol rose by two more to six on Wednesday morning, the Public Health Ministry said.

The Medical Services Department said it had received reports that two more people had died on Wednesday – one in hospital and another at home.

The department said that so far, 37 people have come out to seek medical treatment since the first case was reported on August 19.

 

As of Wednesday morning, 22 people affected by the bootleg alcohol were still in hospital and nine have been discharged. The department said 11 were being treated at the Nopparat Rajthanee Hospital, one at Lerdsin Hospital, one at Rajvithi Hospital and nine others at private hospitals. Of the patients still in hospital, seven are on ventilators, the department added."

 

https://www.nationthailand.com/news/general/40040974

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Posted
13 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

Screenshot-2024-11-21-131916-modified-1.png

 

One of the Melbourne teenagers on an idyllic backpacking adventure in Asia has died in a Bangkok hospital from a suspected methanol poisoning incident in Laos.

 

Bianca Jones, a 19 year old Australian tourist, became the latest person to die from a suspected methanol poisoning incident in Laos after drinking vodka shots. The Aussie teen’s death is the fourth in just over a week, with police scrambling to investigate the deadly trend sweeping the town of Vang Vieng.

 

Jones’ family confirmed the tragic news today, November 21, just hours after the US State Department revealed an American man had also died in the same area. Meanwhile, two young Danish women, aged 19 and 20, met a similar fate last week, sparking fears that a batch of toxic, bootleg alcohol could be to blame.

 

Jones’ friend, 19 year old Holly Bowles, is currently in critical condition in Bangkok, along with a British woman, as both fight for their lives on life support.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese expressed his sorrow for the teenager’s death.

 

“Our first thoughts at this moment are with her family and friends who are grieving a terrible and cruel loss. This is every parent’s very worst fear and a nightmare that no one should have to endure.”

 

 

 

Jones and Bowles were reportedly staying at the Nana Backpacker Hostel in Vang Vieng, where the hostel manager told the Associated Press that over 100 guests were offered free shots of Lao vodka.

 

The manager said no other guests reported health issues but confirmed the hostel has now ceased giving out free alcohol amid the police investigation.

 

Australian and UK police have issued urgent warnings to travellers about the dangers of methanol poisoning in Laos, advising caution when consuming alcohol in the country.

 

Methanol, unlike ethanol found in standard alcoholic drinks, is highly toxic and often used by bootleggers to increase alcohol content cheaply but with lethal results.

 

In recent years, methanol poisonings have claimed lives across the globe, with mass deaths reported in India, the Philippines, and Peru, reported BBC News.

 

Jones’ family has requested privacy as they mourn, thanking supporters for the “overwhelming support, love, and prayers.”

 

By Puntid Tantivangphaisal

Photo courtesy of Herald Sun via Yahoo News

 

Source: The Thaiger

-- 2024-11-21

 

news-footer-2.png

 

image.png

JUst in case one doesn know it, ethanol-alcohol is the only alcohol one can drink but ethanol is poisonous to the human body if in certain amounts.  Thus drinking alcohol can be dangerous immediately as opposed to long term liver damage and death.  I feel sorry for the parents of those teenagers that were fed that poisonous brew in Laos as well as those who died and hope the ones only made sick recover completely and wiser now.

 

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Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, newbee2022 said:

I don't think so that Laotians did it intentionally to kill these young women. 

The incident might have happened by mistakes during distillation or any lack of knowledge about Methanol.

But we don't know the circumstances.

 

Probably, they made it from cassava which, unlike alcohol made from molasses, is notorious for relatively high methanol content unless the heads and tails are separated properly.

 

https://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=17025

 

Quote

I too was confronted with the cyanide poison problem. It seems there are different varieties of cassava, being either "sweet", where the cyanide has been breed out to great extent and "bitter", which would get the bitterness from the cyanide which supposedly is bitter to the taste, like the seed of some fruit. The sweet variety has something like 50 times less cyanide than the bitter but still requires some processing to rid it of the cyanide. The bitter variety are likely from wilder cultivars and the root skin contains a milk that is very high in cyanide. The bitter variety is the most cultivated as they yield bigger roots.
 

 

Edited by Hakuna Matata
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Posted

An inflammatory post has been removed and replies, you will be hearing from me later today for your totally nasty and out of order comment.

@Sandboxer

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