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  1. #1
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    Chiang Mai : Another mystery death

    Another mystery death in Thailand
    Stuart Dye
    - additional reporting Andrew Drummond, NZPA
    Wednesday Mar 9, 2011


    Mariam Soraya Vorster, left, died mysteriously in Chiang Mai just weeks before New Zealander Sarah Carter, right.
    Photos / Supplied

    A fifth tourist has died in Chiang Mai, Thailand, in circumstances eerily similar to New Zealander Sarah Carter's mysterious death - which health officials initially blamed on food poisoning.

    American Mariam Soraya Vorster, a 33-year-old from Seattle working as a guide in Chiang Mai, died on January 11 - just over three weeks before 23-year-old Sarah died.

    Ms Vorster's husband Tony Pandolo told the Herald his wife was perfectly fit and healthy and became sick with symptoms of food poisoning before she died.

    "I kept asking about the health department, or what the next steps would be with the restaurant," Mr Pandolo said. "No one really seemed to know, and it turns out no one really did anything.

    "Soraya had an autopsy at University Hospital in Chiang Mai on January 12 or 13 and we still have no results."

    Ms Vorster's death is one of five in a six-week spell in Chiang Mai.

    Local woman Waraporn Pungmahisiranon died two days before Sarah and British pensioners George and Eileen Everitt died less than two weeks later.

    Those deaths were all in the same hotel - the Downtown Inn.

    Mr Pandolo said his wife was staying in a different hotel, but the symptoms were the same.

    At a press conference in Bangkok yesterday, Chiang Mai Governor Pannada Disakul said: "We have to admit that these deaths coming one after another are nothing more than coincidence.

    "We have done and will continue to do our utmost to make tourists confident in our city."

    The press conference was told Mr and Mrs Everitt, 78 and 74, died within minutes of each other of heart attacks.

    The couple's son Stephen Everitt yesterday told the Herald that was not a believable explanation.

    "They had no history of heart problems or any other problems," said Mr Everitt from his home in Lincolnshire.

    "They were active and healthy for their age and it has come as a total shock.

    "And now they want me to believe they both had heart attacks at the same time. It doesn't make sense. How can it be coincidence?"

    Yesterday's press conference, which did not include details of Ms Vorster's death, was told tests were still being conducted into Sarah's death.

    Tests on tissue taken from Sarah Carter had been inconclusive and samples had been sent for analysis to the United States and Japan, said Dr. Pasakorn Akaraseri, of the Communicable Disease Department of Thailand's Ministry of Health.

    He said there was no evidence to suggest that any of the deaths were as a result of the guests eating food bought at the local market or on the street.

    Sarah and two friends - Amanda Eliason and Emma Langlands - became sick in the Downtown Inn in Chiang Mai on February 4. Sarah died in hospital two days later.

    Amanda and Emma recovered and are now back in New Zealand.

    Richard Carter, Sarah's father, said the press conference was a "fob off".

    "It doesn't sound like there's any real investigation going on here.

    "You start to wonder how many other deaths there have been that are being swept under the carpet."

    Mr Carter said the New Zealand Government needed to put on more pressure to find out how many similar deaths there had been in the last few years so travellers could make informed decisions.

    "At the moment it's pot luck. People head off on holiday and then 'bang' they're dead."

    Foreign Minister Murray McCully said the comments from the press conference were "not wholly convincing and we intend to give them closer scrutiny".

    "We will look into the matter further. I gather there is still some work being done of a forensic nature of some samples and we are looking forward to seeing that material too.

    "It's clear that we need to ask some more questions."

    Asked if the Government would launch its own inquiry Mr McCully said that was too early to consider.

    "Let's not get ahead of ourselves, let's just ask the questions methodically as we go forward... Clearly the obvious questions need to be asked and answered fully."

    nzherald.co.nz

    Related Thread :

    https://teakdoor.com/thailand-and-asia-news/86865-nz-woman-thailand-food-poisoning-death.html (NZ woman in Thailand food poisoning death)

  2. #2

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    dirtydog's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mid
    At a press conference in Bangkok yesterday, Chiang Mai Governor Pannada Disakul said: "We have to admit that these deaths coming one after another are nothing more than coincidence.
    Thank God for that, no need to be wasting time looking for the phantom farang poisoner then is there.

  3. #3
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    Ah, now this ones easily solved. She was poisoned by the Thai Chiang Mai guides.

    Quote Originally Posted by Mid
    American Mariam Soraya Vorster, a 33-year-old from Seattle working as a guide in Chiang Mai, died on January 11

  4. #4
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    i really hope they get to the bottom of this.

    Mr Carter said the New Zealand Government needed to put on more pressure to find out how many similar deaths there had been in the last few years so travellers could make informed decisions
    indeed...

  5. #5
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    yeah, why aren't the staff dropping dead then? It is a sad, heartbreaking story though, these people would havehad many more years if they hadn't gone to that hotel, no thai will ever be blamed for it though, probably they will think up some way to say "It was their own fault"

  6. #6
    My kind of town
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    I stayed at the Downtown Inn some years back and made it out alive.

    I won't be going there again.

  7. #7

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    ^We have a new photo competiton starting tomorrow chitown, 1st prize win a free week at the Downtown Inn in Chiang Mai, includes all meals and drinks, gonna be a winner chitown
    Last edited by dirtydog; 09-03-2011 at 07:14 PM.

  8. #8
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    "coincidence" yes, ask an insurance adjuster what is the probabilities of that many people dieing in the same place of "unknown causes"

  9. #9
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    i stayed there too in 2004

  10. #10

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    dirtydog's Avatar
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    Chitown, we even got prizes for the losers, free tshirt for every one that didn't win


  11. #11
    My kind of town
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    Quote Originally Posted by dirtydog View Post
    ^We have a new photo competiton starting tomorrow chitown, win a free week at the Downtown Inn in Chiang Mai, includes all meals and drinks, gonna be a winner chitown
    FFFF--RRRRR---EEEEE---EEEEE did you say free? Let me grab me camera!

    Heck I eat babies and never get sick!

  12. #12
    I am in Jail

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    Quote Originally Posted by dtalok View Post
    yeah, why aren't the staff dropping dead then?
    It probably makes sense to move this discussion back to the original thread so we don't get spread out.
    https://teakdoor.com/thailand-and-asi...ing-death.html (NZ woman in Thailand food poisoning death)
    I'm glad you posted a separate thread, though, because it shows the new info on yet another victim. But, to answer your question: Thai staff and other people would be dropping dead if the cause were accidental food poisoning. And since pesticide residues were found in blood of Koh Phi Phi victims it is starting to look like at least some of these victims didn't die from accidental causes. There are more reasons to suspect non-accidental causes, too, so see https://teakdoor.com/thailand-and-asi...ing-death.html (NZ woman in Thailand food poisoning death)

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