Australia probes how Bali body returned home without heart

Indonesian rescuers (R and C) and marine police officers search for missing victims of a ferry accident in the waters off the Bali Strait near Jembrana, on Bali island on July 5, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 23 September 2025
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Australia probes how Bali body returned home without heart

SYDNEY: Australian officials have demanded answers from Indonesian counterparts after the body of a young man who died on the resort island of Bali was repatriated without his heart.
Queensland man Byron Haddow, 23, was found dead in the plunge pool of his Bali villa this year while on holiday.
His body was returned to Australia four weeks later, where a second autopsy found he was missing his heart.
A spokesperson for Australia’s foreign ministry said Tuesday they were providing consular assistance to Haddow’s family but could not comment further owing to privacy obligations.
“They just rung us to ask if we were aware that his heart had been retained over in Bali,” mother Chantal Haddow told Australia’s Channel Nine.
“Just when I thought I couldn’t feel any more heartbroken, it was another kick in the guts,” she said
“I feel like there was foul play. I think that something’s happened to him prior to being in the pool.”
Senior Australian officials in Bali and Jakarta have made representations to the Indonesian Government regarding the matter.
The Australian Consulate-General in Bali has also conveyed the family’s concerns to hospital officials.
But the forensic doctor who performed the original autopsy rejected claims of wrongdoing.
“For forensic purposes, his heart was tested and was kept behind when the family repatriated the body home,” doctor Nola Margaret Gunawan told The Sydney Morning Herald newspaper on Monday.
“I have given the autopsy result and explanation to the family. They have accepted my explanation.”
Indonesia remains a popular tourist destination, with official data showing it was the top destination for short-term trips overseas by Australians in 2023.


Cambodia shuts Thailand border crossings over deadly fighting

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Cambodia shuts Thailand border crossings over deadly fighting

  • Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul said Trump “didn’t mention whether we should make a ceasefire” during their Friday phone call
  • Across the border, a Cambodian evacuee said she was “sad” the fighting hadn’t stopped despite Trump’s intervention

BANGKOK: Cambodia shut its border crossings with Thailand on Saturday, after Bangkok denied US President Donald Trump’s claim that a truce had been agreed to end days of deadly fighting.
Violence between the Southeast Asian neighbors, which stems from a long-running dispute over the colonial-era demarcation of their 800-kilometer (500-mile) border, has displaced around half a million people on both sides.
At least 25 people have died this week, including four Thai soldiers the defense ministry said were killed in the border area on Saturday.
The latest fatalities were followed by Phnom Penh announcing it would immediately “suspend all entry and exit movements at all Cambodia-Thailand border crossings,” the interior ministry said.
Each side blamed the other for reigniting the conflict, before Trump said a truce had been agreed.
Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul said Trump “didn’t mention whether we should make a ceasefire” during their Friday phone call.
The two leaders “didn’t discuss” the issue, Anutin told journalists on Saturday.
Trump had hailed his “very good conversation” with Anutin and Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet on Friday.
“They have agreed to CEASE all shooting effective this evening, and go back to the original Peace Accord” agreed in July, Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.
The United States, China and Malaysia, as chair of the regional bloc ASEAN, brokered a ceasefire in July after an initial five-day spate of violence.
In October, Trump backed a follow-on joint declaration between Thailand and Cambodia, touting new trade deals after they agreed to prolong their truce.
But Thailand suspended the agreement the following month after Thai soldiers were wounded by land mines at the border.
In Thailand, evacuee Kanyapat Saopria said she doesn’t “trust Cambodia anymore.”
“The last round of peace efforts didn’t work out... I don’t know if this one will either,” the 39-year-old told AFP.
Across the border, a Cambodian evacuee said she was “sad” the fighting hadn’t stopped despite Trump’s intervention.
“I am not happy with brutal acts,” said Vy Rina, 43.

- Trading blame over civilians -

Bangkok and Phnom Penh have traded accusations of attacks against civilians, with the Thai army reporting six wounded on Saturday by Cambodian rockets.
Cambodia’s information minister, Neth Pheaktra, meanwhile said Thai forces had “expanded their attacks to include civilian infrastructure and Cambodian civilians.”
A Thai navy spokesman said the air force “successfully destroyed” two Cambodian bridges used to transport weapons to the conflict zone.
Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim on Saturday urged both sides to “cease all forms of hostilities and refrain from any further military actions.”
Thailand has reported 14 soldiers killed and seven civilian deaths, while Cambodia said four civilians were killed earlier this week.
At a camp in Thailand’s Buriram, AFP journalists saw displaced residents calling relatives near the border who reported that fighting was ongoing.
Thailand’s prime minister has vowed to “continue to perform military actions until we feel no more harm and threats to our land and people.”
After the call with Trump, Anutin said “the one who violated the agreement needs to fix (the situation).”
Cambodia’s Hun Manet, meanwhile, said his country “has always been adhering to peaceful means for dispute resolutions.”