Monday, March 10, 2008

Tourist's misadventure: Canadian man meets mountain's spirits!

A supposed excitement and merry-making relative to the first time visit cum adventure of a westerner married to a local woman has turned unexpectedly into bizarre and total grief. This came about when Otto Unsinn, 62, met his own death in what appears to be a mishap afternoon of March 4 in his way to the remote mountainous village of Buaya (or Buwaya), Balbalan.

According to some witnesses who happen to be the victim's companions at the time of accident, Unsinn and his wife Eulalia Lumiwan, 56, together with several locales, were trekking the trail going to Buaya when the accident happened.

Unsinn who showed that time too much excitement to reach his wife's native home was moving fast ahead of the others when suddenly he got skidded and dropped into a relatively deep canal while trying to cross it. Apparently, he fell quickly headfirst facing the ground and as he landed his head quick-struck a seemingly sharp crushed stone immediately causing him unconscious, a witness said. Bruises in the face and a wound in the lower jaw are visible.

The wife tried to apply a sort of first aid by pumping his breast and then rushed him after that to the hospital. Few hours along the way, Unsinn was still with his pulse but did not make it the time he reached the Pinukpuk District Hospital. There he was declared dead on arrival.

Unsinn is a German national turned Canadian citizen.

The wife has already informed the German and Canadian embassies regarding her husband's death and her desire to bring home to Canada the cadaver, and she and her relatives also had requested the police and the National Bureau of Investigation to conduct an investigation and perform an autopsy to dispel doubts on the matter.

Unsinn now lies in state at the residence of Mr. Castro Bedoy, brother-in-law, at Purok 4, Bulanao, Tabuk City, this province while waiting the travel papers and other requirements be processed and finished for him to be brought home.