World

Bali death more than alcohol and pool, lawyers say

Haddow’s family said it was unaware of him being on any prescription drugs or suffering ill mental health.

Investigators have revealed Haddow was with three other Australians – two women and a man – before he died. This masthead has been told by lawyers that there was a “financial exchange” between Haddow and two of the others. The circumstances were unknown.

No evidence has been produced to suggest the Australians were in some way responsible for Haddow’s death, either deliberately or unintentionally.

But the lawyers, from the firm Malekat Hukum, were dumbfounded that they had not been interviewed.

“At present, the police have stated they require assistance from the Australian consulate to secure statements from these three witnesses,” it said in a statement.

“However, it is deeply concerning that to date, the consulate has not provided any response.”

The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs has been contacted for comment.

Police not notified

Bali’s Badung Regency police chief Arif Batubara said the Australians were not interviewed because police were informed of the death four days later, by which time the trio had gone home.

If correct, it would mean the death of a seemingly healthy young foreigner did not trigger a notification to police, even though villa management and medical personnel had attended the scene and Haddow’s body had been received by a hospital.

The matter of the missing heart also appeared to be the result of a failure of communication or process. Dr Nola Margaret Gunawan, the forensic doctor who performed the original autopsy at Bali’s Sanglah Hospital, said the organ was kept in Bali for more testing because results could take weeks.

Haddow’s family was informed that his heart was missing by the Queensland Coroners Court, which had performed another autopsy. By then, it was too late to postpone his funeral, mother Chantal Haddow said.

“I have given the autopsy result and explanation to the family. They have accepted my explanation,” Nola said.

The hospital on Wednesday said that when the parents consented to the autopsy, they were also consenting for the heart to be tested. That the body was sent home to Australia before the tests were finished was neither the hospital’s decision nor responsibility, it said.

A separate agency was responsible for repatriation, but it was unclear if it was aware that Haddow’s body was leaving for Queensland without one of the organs.

“This incident raises serious questions regarding medical practices in Bali,” the Haddows’ lawyers said. “We affirm that what happened to Byron Haddow is a grave matter of law, ethics and humanity.”

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  • Source of information and images “brisbanetimes”

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