British Teacher GARY MOSS, 55, Passed Away in Phnom Penh
- armchairlawyer
- Expatriate
- Posts: 2522
- Joined: Sat Aug 29, 2015 1:43 pm
- Reputation: 1518
Re: British Teacher GARY MOSS, 55, Passed Away in Phnom Penh
You make a very good point Doc. Maybe not the best place to say it.
- John Bingham
- Expatriate
- Posts: 13792
- Joined: Sun Dec 07, 2014 11:26 pm
- Reputation: 8984
Re: British Teacher GARY MOSS, 55, Passed Away in Phnom Penh
It was you I meant, glad to hear you're good.
Silence, exile, and cunning.
Re: British Teacher GARY MOSS, 55, Passed Away in Phnom Penh
Thanks for the inquiry, cruefox. Gary and the friend who found him, Frank, watched the Spurs game at Score Bar last Saturday night, as they were both fans. Frank said he appeared quite healthy and was looking forward to teaching again. Things obviously changed rapidly the next day.
The ambulance that refused to take him was from Sunrise, a Japanese owned hospital with a good reputation. The accompanying doctor told Frank they were following government orders. Our school then contacted Calmette, who had no qualms about sending an ambulance with a doctor and attendants, despite being told he had a fairly mild fever. Unfortunately, he was dead when they arrived. There seems to be two conflicting attitudes at the hospitals.
The British Embassy told us they had contacted his children in the UK. He usually arranged for one or more of his kids to visit at Christmas, invariably paying all expenses, but it wasn't possible this year.
The school has already organised monks to perform the usual rituals and chants at the pagoda where his body was taken. We are waiting to hear what arrangements his family want made. All of our staff told me this morning they would like some form of service or remembrance for Gary. I suggested a wake would be culturally most appropriate, but we are waiting to hear from his family, via the Embassy.
I will keep you informed of further developments.
The ambulance that refused to take him was from Sunrise, a Japanese owned hospital with a good reputation. The accompanying doctor told Frank they were following government orders. Our school then contacted Calmette, who had no qualms about sending an ambulance with a doctor and attendants, despite being told he had a fairly mild fever. Unfortunately, he was dead when they arrived. There seems to be two conflicting attitudes at the hospitals.
The British Embassy told us they had contacted his children in the UK. He usually arranged for one or more of his kids to visit at Christmas, invariably paying all expenses, but it wasn't possible this year.
The school has already organised monks to perform the usual rituals and chants at the pagoda where his body was taken. We are waiting to hear what arrangements his family want made. All of our staff told me this morning they would like some form of service or remembrance for Gary. I suggested a wake would be culturally most appropriate, but we are waiting to hear from his family, via the Embassy.
I will keep you informed of further developments.
Re: British Teacher GARY MOSS, 55, Passed Away in Phnom Penh
Ambulances refusing to take sick patients because of covid fears does not bode well if there's a serious outbreak here.
It's always sad to read about the death of expats here, especially if they died through no fault of their own (drug abuse etc..)
Condolences to his family and friends.
It's always sad to read about the death of expats here, especially if they died through no fault of their own (drug abuse etc..)
Condolences to his family and friends.
The difference between animals and humans is that animals would never allow the dumb ones to lead the pack.
Re: British Teacher GARY MOSS, 55, Passed Away in Phnom Penh
Drug addiction is a disease, not a "fault of their own."xandreu wrote: ↑Sat Jan 09, 2021 3:23 pm Ambulances refusing to take sick patients because of covid fears does not bode well if there's a serious outbreak here.
It's always sad to read about the death of expats here, especially if they died through no fault of their own (drug abuse etc..)
Condolences to his family and friends.
Re: British Teacher GARY MOSS, 55, Passed Away in Phnom Penh
I look at as a fault they chose to pursue. A disease is something you can catch.Marty wrote: ↑Sat Jan 09, 2021 3:56 pmDrug addiction is a disease, not a "fault of their own."xandreu wrote: ↑Sat Jan 09, 2021 3:23 pm Ambulances refusing to take sick patients because of covid fears does not bode well if there's a serious outbreak here.
It's always sad to read about the death of expats here, especially if they died through no fault of their own (drug abuse etc..)
Condolences to his family and friends.
-
- Expatriate
- Posts: 13458
- Joined: Wed May 28, 2014 11:37 pm
- Reputation: 3974
Re: British Teacher GARY MOSS, 55, Passed Away in Phnom Penh
Hey guys, This is a thread about Gary passing, so maybe not the best place for your discussion.
RIP, and thoughts to all his friends and coworkers.
RIP, and thoughts to all his friends and coworkers.
Re: British Teacher GARY MOSS, 55, Passed Away in Phnom Penh
Thanks for the info Gilmore. My wife and I visited the pagoda this morning and talked to the funeral directors. They are indeed waiting on communication from his family as to where to proceed next. I was talking to one of Gary's sons on social media yesterday and it appeared I was the first person to give him the news. Therefore, I am not at all sure if the Embassy has indeed contacted them. I know that he was rather estranged from his family and I have no evidence of his sons ever visiting, He did in fact tell me he had little knowledge of his fathers life here. Gary does have a young son born here in Cambodia who resides in Kandal province with his mother. Perhaps it is he who visited at Christmas?Gilmore wrote: ↑Sat Jan 09, 2021 3:12 pm Thanks for the inquiry, cruefox. Gary and the friend who found him, Frank, watched the Spurs game at Score Bar last Saturday night, as they were both fans. Frank said he appeared quite healthy and was looking forward to teaching again. Things obviously changed rapidly the next day.
The ambulance that refused to take him was from Sunrise, a Japanese owned hospital with a good reputation. The accompanying doctor told Frank they were following government orders. Our school then contacted Calmette, who had no qualms about sending an ambulance with a doctor and attendants, despite being told he had a fairly mild fever. Unfortunately, he was dead when they arrived. There seems to be two conflicting attitudes at the hospitals.
The British Embassy told us they had contacted his children in the UK. He usually arranged for one or more of his kids to visit at Christmas, invariably paying all expenses, but it wasn't possible this year.
The school has already organised monks to perform the usual rituals and chants at the pagoda where his body was taken. We are waiting to hear what arrangements his family want made. All of our staff told me this morning they would like some form of service or remembrance for Gary. I suggested a wake would be culturally most appropriate, but we are waiting to hear from his family, via the Embassy.
I will keep you informed of further developments.
I have given his son in England the number of the funeral directors although I have not heard anything from him today. Hopefully they get in contact and we can have some sort of a ceremony for Gary. It is the least he deserves.
Re: British Teacher GARY MOSS, 55, Passed Away in Phnom Penh
His son has now been in contact with the Embassy, so hopefully we can get some kind of a send off for Gary soon.
Re: British Teacher GARY MOSS, 55, Passed Away in Phnom Penh
Condolences to the deceased's friends and family.
Wasn't there another British teacher with the same last name who recently passed away? Related? Not a very common last name I'd imagine.
Wasn't there another British teacher with the same last name who recently passed away? Related? Not a very common last name I'd imagine.
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
- 25 Replies
- 8877 Views
-
Last post by La Quenta
-
- 11 Replies
- 8740 Views
-
Last post by SternAAlbifrons
-
- 51 Replies
- 8352 Views
-
Last post by Captain Bonez
-
- 21 Replies
- 5151 Views
-
Last post by Felgerkarb
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: ali baba, Amazon [Bot], armchairlawyer, BongKingKong, ExPenhMan, Freightdog, IraHayes, Jerry Atrick, John Bingham, johnny lightning, KevinTan, khmerhamster, ThiagoA, yellowPoint and 1003 guests