A British couple died from carbon monoxide poisoning after a pesticide to kill bed bugs was sprayed in the room next door at their hotel in Egypt, a coroner has ruled.
John and Susan Cooper suddenly fell ill while they were staying at the Steigenberger Aqua Magic Hotel in the Red Sea resort of Hurghada in August 2018.
Mr Cooper, 69, and his wife, 63, had been enjoying a “brilliant” holiday until the eighth day of their stay, Preston Coroner’s Court heard.
Around lunchtime on 20 August the room next door to the couple – which had an adjoining locked door, was fumigated with a pesticide known as Lambda, to tackle a bed bug infestation.
The room was then sealed with masking tape around the door.
Be the first to get Breaking News
Install the Sky News app for free
The couple returned to the room for the night, but were both found seriously ill the following morning by their daughter, who knocked on their door after they failed to come down to breakfast.
Mr Cooper, a builder, was declared dead in their room on 21 August, while Mrs Cooper, a cashier in a Thomas Cook bureau de change, died in hospital hours later.
The three-day inquest heard that in some countries Lambda is sometimes diluted with another substance, dichloromethane, which causes the body to metabolise or ingest carbon monoxide.
On Friday, Dr James Adeley, senior coroner for Lancashire, ruled the couple died as a result of carbon monoxide poisoning due to inhaling vapour from a pesticide which contained dichloromethane.
‘It should never have been allowed to happen’
Speaking outside the court, Mr and Mrs Cooper’s daughter, Kelly Ormerod, described the “pain and loss” family members have felt in the wake of the tragedy.
“After more than five years of waiting we have finally been given closure today on the cause of mum and dad’s death,” she said.
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
“No matter what the outcome today brought, nothing would make up for the pain and loss we’ve felt since that day.
“To go on a family holiday full of the joys and excitement, spending quality time together, to then be faced with the heart-rending event that happened, will never be forgotten.
“To this day our family struggle to comprehend what happened. It should never have been allowed to happen.
“The last few years have been the most traumatic and emotional time for all of us involved.
“While time has moved on it’s stood still for our family because of the many unanswered questions we have had.
“There’s now a huge void in our lives and I don’t think we will ever fully come to terms with losing them the way that we did – they were both fit and healthy.”