Parents issue dire travel warning after daughters die on vacation: ‘Remove this country from your bucket list’

The parents of two Australian teenagers who died in Laos last year have begged for Australians to remove the destination from their bucket lists.
Ahead of the anniversary of their daughters’ deaths, Holly Morton-Bowles and Bianca Jones’ parents slammed the Laos government as “corrupt” in an interview with the Herald Sun.
They also claimed there’s no evidence police have investigated the tragedy.
Best friends Holly and Bianca, both 19, were on the trip of a lifetime in the tourist town of Vang Vieng in November last year when they accidentally consumed methanol.
Holly Morton-Bowles (seen here) and Bianca Jones were on a trip in the tourist town of Vang Vieng in Laos when they accidentally consumed methanol, and later died. Facebook / Holly Bowles
Bianca Jones in a photo posted to Facebook on June 21, 2024. Facebook / Bianca Jones
The pair died alongside four other tourists staying at the Nana Backpackers hostel.
The colorless, odorless poison can cause serious illness and can be fatal if just 0.85 fluid ounces are consumed.
Shaun Bowles and Samantha Morton said they were disappointed in the investigation so far, saying: “We recognize how corrupt and unhelpful the Laos Government (is), there is no evidence whatsoever to suggest there is any type of investigation going on.
“(Our) hope is that Australians remove this country from their bucket list, your life is worth nothing over there and we have seen this first-hand as well as other families that have been involved in this tragedy.”
Victorian premier Jacinta Allan acknowledged that the parents’ frustrations were “very real” due to the lack of “change happening at the end of the Laotian investigation.”
Meanwhile, Mark and Michelle Jones said “to date, no individual or organization has been held accountable” and noted that it “appears these deaths of innocent young women may be forgotten, brushed aside and left unresolved.”
Chatoulong Bouasisavath, the Laos ambassador to Australia, did not respond to questions from the Herald Sun.
The girls died alongside four other tourists staying at the Nana Backpackers hostel. Facebook / Holly Bowles
The girls’ parents slammed the Laos government as “corrupt” in an interview over the way their deaths were examined. Facebook / Bianca Jones
‘We’ve heard nothing’
The families’ search for answers has been a long one, and the silence from Laos has been deafening.
In February it was revealed that the Laos government had refused to meet with the families of those who were killed in the mass methanol poisoning event.
In an interview with “60 Minutes” journalist Tara Brown, Mark and Michelle Jones alongside Sam and Shaun Bowles said the Laos government has refused to meet with them since the teenagers’ deaths.
“We’ve heard nothing,” Jones said in the interview, which aired on Sunday night.
“I cannot have my daughter’s passing not mean anything.”
Following the tragic deaths of Jones and Bowles, an outpouring of sympathy came in from around Australia and the world including from Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, while hundreds attended a vigil held in the women’s honor in Melbourne in November last year.
Samantha Morton and Shaun Bowles say the Laos government has refused to meet with them. 60 Minutes Australia
Jones was farewelled at a funeral service on December 6 at her old school, Mentone Girls’ Gramma.
Days later, friends and family farewelled Bowles at Beaumaris Secondary College, in Melbourne’s southeast.
Following the deaths of Jones and Bowles, the families of the teenagers created a crowd-funding page to assist with covering out-of-pocket expenses incurred by the tragedy. The funds would also be put towards support awareness, education and prevention initiatives around methanol poisoning.
“60 Minutes’” Brown said attempts to talk to authorities in Laos have been unsuccessful: “Last November, in a letter to our Foreign Minister Penny Wong, the Lao Government did express its ‘profound sadness’ over the deaths. And it said it ‘was investigating the cause of the incident to bring the perpetrators to justice.’
“But so far despite those words there’s been very little action. When we tried to go to Laos to find out why we were denied access to the country because they claimed the case is still being worked on.
“More significantly, and cruelly, no Lao officials will meet with the devastated families, not even in private.”




