American father and son die after drowning more than 100 times digging wabps while zupwin in Laos

An American man and his 12-year-old son died last month after being suffocated while camping in an independence camp in Laos and searched multiple times, a hospital official said.
Dan Owen, the director of an international school in Vietnam, and his son Cooper were attacked by insects on Oct. 15 green on the blue farm, as they go down the zip tree.
The camp is located outside the city of Luang Prabang, a popular tourist site in the South Asian nation that was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1995.
Both were rushed to a local clinic and then transported to Luang Prabang Provincial Hospital where they arrived in critical condition, said Jorvue YianouchTeng, a doctor at the emergency room that received it.
“The son did not know and passed after half an hour, while the father noticed and passed about three hours later,” he told related media. “We tried everything we could to save them but we couldn’t.”
The doctor said they both suffered severe anaphylactic shock after more than 100 shocks to their bodies, but that cause of death had not been determined.
The Asian Giant Hornet, known as the “Ling Hornet” because of its aggressive behavior towards other insects such as bees, is found in Laos but so are several other game species. It was not clear which species the two had died. Last December, agriculture officials confirmed it Hornet had finished In the US The Invasive species It was confirmed that it is in the US in 2019 after officials in Washington State received and confirmed two Hornet reports. Efforts soon began to track and remove them.
Elaine Kurtenbach / AP
The local clinic where this was first written declined to comment and Green Jungle Park did not respond to an inquiry from the AP.
Phanomsay Phakan, a doctor at the Phakan Arocavet clinic where the two were first treated, told their UK morgues that their bodies were covered in red spots.
“It was very painful,” said Phakan Times. “Many seizures, more than 100, over the whole body. I thought it was a very dangerous situation because I have never seen it as bad as that.”
The US State Department said it could confirm the deaths of two US citizens in Luang Prabang but would not comment further “out of respect for the privacy of family and loved ones.”
Laos’ Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not respond to a request for comment.
In the work of Facebook, the employer of Owen, a low-level international school, praises him as “the lives that touch things” between 18 years and Check, which operates 35 schools around the world. He once worked in five of its schools and was the director of the QSI International School in Haipohong, Vietnam at the time of his death.
“He is deeply loved by our community and will always be,” the school said. “Our sincere condolences go out to Owen’s family and all who know and love him.”



