Quebec sisters found dead in Thai hotel room - Action News
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Quebec sisters found dead in Thai hotel room

A town official in a small Quebec community has confirmed the identities of two sisters found dead in a room at a Thai resort yesterday.

Cause of deaths not yet known

A town officialin a small Quebec community has confirmed the identities of two sisters found dead in a room at a Thai resort yesterday.

Audrey and Nomi Blanger, aged 20 and 25, were from Pohngamook in the Lower Saint Lawrence region of Quebec.

A town councillor told CBC News the small community is in shock.

A cousin told The Canadian Press late Saturday that the sisters studied in Quebec City with their elder sister, but worked at the family store in the community of roughly 3,000. The cousin said the women's parents were notified while visiting their surviving daughter in Quebec City.

Sisters Audrey and Nomi Blanger were from Pohngamook in the Lower Saint Lawrence region of Quebec. (mcot.net)

The tragic news trickled back to the March Bonichoix, the family store where the sisters worked, an employee said, but would not comment further.

The bodies of the two women were discovered in their main-floor room in the tourist island of Phi Phi Friday afternoon local time.

There were no signs of violencein the room,according to local police. Investigators arelooking into the possibility thewomenwere poisoned.

"It's difficult to get a sense of just what police found when they visited the room, but they had said there were signs that the two women had been sick and they had mysterious rashes on their skin,"Alan Morison of the Phuket Wan news website told CBC Montreal.

The sisters were on Phi Phi island, which is in the Andaman Sea, off Thailand's west coast. (CBC)

That information was confirmed by nurses at the hospital where the bodies were taken on Thailand's mainland, he said.

Autopsies will be conducted to determine the official cause of death.

Representatives from the Canadian Embassy in Thailand were expected to visit the island on Saturday. Canada's Department of Foreign Affairs said privacy concerns preventit from releasing further details or identify the women.

"Canadian consular officials in Bangkok are providing consular assistance to the family and are in contact with local authorities," Claude Rochon, a spokeswoman for the department, said in an email statement. "Our thoughts are with the family and friends of the Canadian Citizens who passed away in Thailand."

Bodies found by hotel staff

According to Phuketwan.com, a maid knocked on thedoor of the women'sroomThursday but there was no response.

On Friday, a master key was usedtoenter the roomand that's when the bodies were discovered. The women had checked into the hotel on Tuesday.

Thai media identified the hotel where the women were staying as the Phi Phi Palms Residence. (Latestays.com)

Anangkana Choisrinal, a nurse at the hospital where the bodies were taken, told the Phuket Wan she had never seen a case like it.

''We have no idea as yet what killed the women," she told the website. ''They had been dead between 12 and 20 hours when they were found."

In 2009, two young tourists, one from the United States and the other from Norway, staying atanearby guest house alsodied under mysterious circumstances.

Their deaths remain unsolved, but there was speculationthe women had been poisoned.

with files from The Canadian Press