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Father and son killed by swarm of hornets while ziplining in Laos
Daniel Owen, 47, and his 15-year-old son Cooper, died just hours after they were taken to hospital
A US American teacher and his teenage son were killed by a swarm of hundreds of hornets while on a ziplining holiday in Laos.
Daniel Owen, 47, and his 15-year-old son Cooper died on 15 October while visiting an eco-adventure resort near the northern city of Luang Prabang.
Hundreds of what are believed to have been Asian giant hornets attacked the pair while they were trying to descend from a tree, a source close to two US diplomats in Laos told The Times.
Their bodies were 'covered in red spots' after the 'very, very painful' attack, Phanomsay Phakan, a doctor at the Phakan Arocavet Clinic where the father and son were taken, told the newspaper.
Daniel Owen was director of an international school in Vietnam.
“A lot of stings, more than 100, over the whole body. I thought already that it’s a very dangerous situation because I had never seen it as bad as that,” he said.
After the incident the father and son arrived conscious at the Phanak clinic, showing no signs of anaphylactic shock – allergic reactions that can kill people who have been stung by bees, wasps and hornets. However they died just hours later after they were taken to the Luang Prabang provincial hospital.
Asian Giant Hornets are the world’s largest hornet, and are native to tropical parts of East Asia, South Asia, mainland Southeast Asia, and parts of the Russian east. In recent years they have spread to countries in western Europe, including the UK.
They are responsible for dozens of deaths every year owing to the power of their ¼" stingers, which emit a particularly potent venom containing mastoparan-M – a toxin commonly found in wasp venom.
Last month in Spain a man died after accidentally stepping on a hornet’s nest in the Galicia region. Two others died the same month.



