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Thomas Cook agent died of carbon monoxide poising from hotel bedbug spray, inquest rules

Thomas Cook agent Susan Cooper and her husband John  died in Egypt from carbon monoxide poisoning after hotel room next door was sprayed to kill bedbugs, an inquest has ruled.

The couple from Burnley in Lancashire fell ill while on a family holiday in Hurghada on August 21, 2018.

An inquest heard the next-door room had been fumigated following a report of a bedbug infestation.

Senior coroner Dr James Adeley said the couple were poisoned overnight.

Mrs Cooper, 63, a cashier in a Thomas Cook bureau de change, and her husband, 69, had been on holiday at the Steigenberger Aqua Magic Hotel, Preston Coroner’s Court heard.

But around lunch time on the eighth day into their holiday the room next to theirs, which had an adjoining locked door between them, was fumigated with pesticide known as Lambda, for a bedbug infestation.

The room was then sealed with masking tape around the door.

Hours later the couple returned to their room for the night but were found seriously ill the next day by their daughter, Kelly Ormerod.

Mr Cooper, a builder, was declared dead in the room and Mrs Cooper hours later in hospital.

The inquest heard in some countries the pesticide Lambda is sometimes diluted with another substance, dichloromethane, which causes the body to metabolise or ingest carbon monoxide, the BBC reported.

Following a three-day inquest hearing, the senior coroner for Lancashire, ruled on Friday that the deaths were caused by carbon monoxide poisoning as a result of inhaling the vapour from spraying the pesticide which contained dichloromethane.

He said the spraying had caused enough vapour to enter the room and kill the Coopers.

The inquest, five years on, also heard of multiple, repeated attempts to obtain more documents and information from the authorities in Egypt despite numerous requests from the Foreign Office.

Dr Adeley said Mr Cooper’s illness and death was rapid, but described the medical treatment provided for Mrs Cooper as “utterly insufficient” after she was taken to a clinic in the hotel before an ambulance was called, creating a delay of four hours before she got to hospital.

Ms Ormerod said that “after more than five years of waiting, we’ve finally been given some closure around the deaths of mum and dad”.

“Our family still struggle to comprehend what we went through that day and feel like it should never have happened,” she said.

“The last few years have been the most traumatic time for all of us.

“Having to relive everything at the inquest has been harrowing but it was something we had to do for mum and dad.

“We’d do anything to have them back in our lives but we take some small comfort from at least having the answers we deserve.”

The family are now campaigning to change laws around British holiday hotels using the solvent for pesticide usage, according to the Lancashire Telegraph.

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