French Tourist Dies Trying to Take Selfie at Thai Waterfall

Web Staff
By Web Staff
November 15, 2019World News
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French Tourist Dies Trying to Take Selfie at Thai Waterfall
Na Mueang 2 waterfall on the Thai island of Koh Samui. (Screenshot/Google Maps)

A French tourist has died after falling from a waterfall in Thailand while attempting to take a selfie.

The 33-year-old man died on Thursday after he slipped and fell from the Na Mueang 2 waterfall on the Thai island of Koh Samui—the same spot where a Spanish tourist died in a fall in July, the AFP news agency reported.

“His friend said he was trying to take a selfie and then he slipped and fell,” Lieutenant Phuvadol Viriyavarangkul of the island’s tourist police told AFP.

Viriyavarangkul told the news agency that the spot is roped off and there is a sign warning tourists of the danger.

CNN has contacted the French Foreign Ministry for comment on the incident.

In October, four members of the same family drowned at a dam in India after slipping into the water while trying to take a selfie.

Selfies

From fall 2011 to fall 2017, 259 people died while taking selfies, according to researchers from India. The study looked at selfie deaths reported across the world.

Researchers found that about 72.5 percent of the deaths were males and the rest were females. The highest number of selfie deaths was reported in India, followed by Russia, the United States, and Pakistan.

India accounted for more than half the global total, with 159 reported selfie deaths since 2011. The high number of selfie-related deaths in India was attributed in part to the country having a high share of the world’s population of 30-year-olds or younger.

The mean age of the victims was 22.9 years old with about half the total selfie deaths occurring among the 20 to 29-year-old age group. Another 36 percent of the deaths occurred in the 10 to 19-year-old age group.

NTD Photo
Stock image showing a woman taking a selfie. (Cristina Zaragoza/Unsplash)

“Drowning, transport, and fall form the topmost reasons for deaths caused by selfies. We also classified reasons for deaths due to selfie as risky behavior or non-risky behavior. Risky behavior caused more deaths and incidents due to selfies than non-risky behavior.

The number of deaths in females is less due to risky behavior than non-risky behavior while it is approximately three times in males,” the researchers wrote in a summary of results.

“About three-fourth of selfie deaths occurred in males. A project called selfiecity has established that women take more selfies as compared to men. But because men are more likely to take a risk to click selfie as compared to women, it justifies the higher number of deaths and incidents for men.”

The CNN Wire contributed to this report.

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