A toxic chemical added to a popular pain reliever likely killed two dozen children in Bangladesh, health officials said Tuesday.
That means Samantha Orobator and John Watson could be home within weeks, the spokesman said. Each prisoner must now apply for return under the agreement, said the spokesman, who asked not to be named, in line with policy. Britain and Laos signed the deal in May to allow the return of Orobator and Watson, the only Britons held in Laos, the spokesman said. Normally, that agreement would have to go through parliamentary procedures before passage, the Foreign Office spokesman said. Monday, Foreign Office Minister Chris Bryant signed a memorandum of understanding with Laos that speeds the prisoners’ return, the spokesman said. Though not specific to Orobator’s case, the agreement was signed with her in mind, because officials hope she can give birth in Britain.
Don’t Miss
Life for pregnant Briton in Laos trial
Jailed Briton could be transferred from Laos to UK
Orobator is in her third trimester and can safely travel for only two more weeks, Bryant told Sky News from Bangkok, Thailand. She was jailed in August after being arrested with about a half-kilogram of heroin at the airport in the Lao capital, Vientiane, officials have said. Last month, she received a life sentence for drug trafficking. Watson also is jailed on drug charges, the Foreign Office spokesman said.
The circumstances under which Orobator became pregnant in prison remain unclear. She told her mother she was not raped and that the father is not a prison official. A government-run Lao newspaper reported that Orobator said she impregnated herself with sperm from another prisoner.