With the visitor numbers of sites all over the world rising and the recent selfie-craze leading to irresponsible acts, the number of fatal accidents at WHS increases as well. Just in the last few weeks “
A man fell off the edge of the Grand Canyon, the third visitor death in eight days
” and another “
Tourist died of hypothermia after falling into Lake McDonald, Glacier Park
”.
We have a connection
Fatal accidents or 'disasters'
about these unfortunate events. It includes sites:
-
where there have been "disasters" causing significant numbers of human deaths from a single incident, or
-
where repeated "tourism related" deaths have totalled a significant number
Loosely ordered by overall number of fatalities, here are the main reasons why people die at WHS:
Mining Disasters (1350+)
Perhaps surprisingly, mining is the biggest killer of them all. We already had 2 serious mining disasters in this connection: at Le Bois du Cazier (
Mining Sites of Wallonia
) the last major mining disaster in European history cost 262 lives. 50 years earlier, the Courrières disaster (
Nord-Pas de Calais
) resulted in almost 1,100 deaths.
Potosí
’s Cerro Rico is a still active mining WHS: according to the latest reports that I could find there were 19 and 20 deaths from mining accidents in 2009 and 2010 respectively. These all of course included workers and no tourists.
Climbing Accidents (400+)
Among tourists / travellers / explorers, climbing accidents are the biggest life-takers. More than 296 people
have died trying to climb Mount Everest
.
Mt Kilimanjaro
takes about 10 lives a year and even the less popular
Kangchenjunga
has seen over 50 deaths since 1905.
And it's not only the climbing, the fatigue & the falling: avalanches and earthquakes in the climbing areas also contribute. The 2015 Sabah earthquake claimed 18 fatalities on
Mount Kinabalu
for example.
Terrorist Attacks (300+)
Terrorist Attacks
are part of a separate connection, but they have made hundreds of victims. One event that in particular stands out is the attack on Queen Hatshepsut's tomb in
Ancient Thebes
, in November 1997. 62 people died, mostly tourists.
Plane Crashes (150+)
I would have guessed that plane crashes would be higher up the list, as they often have large numbers of fatalities. Planes often fall down close to an airport or near a mountain however, WHS core zones are relatively free of major crashes. Smaller accidents have appeared in
Te Wahipounamu
, at the
Nasca Lines
and even several times at the
Everglades
.
Human Stampedes (150+)
Wikipedia even has a
List of Human Stampedes.
It features an event in
Valletta
from 1823: about 110 children died in a stampede while attempting to leave the Convent of the Minori Osservanti during the Carnival celebrations. We already had discovered 2 more of these freak accidents which wiki has not listed: at least 26 people were crushed to death in a deadly stampede in the famous Djinguereber mosque in the city of
Timbuktu
(2010) and at the
Qutb Minar
a stampede of schoolgirls inside the tower when the power inside the tower failed lead to 20 deaths (1979).
Attacks by wild animals (35+)
People dying after an attack by a wild animal in a WH designated area seems to happen very rarely. Among the safari destinations
Mana Pools
stands out in a negative way: I found incidents with lions and with an elephant at Mana Pools. No direct link with the park's policy to allow walking safaris seems to exist. Last year, 2 people were
killed by a hippo
at
Lake Navaisha
. All these are not ‘significant’ enough to warrant a connection however.
More dangerous to human life are bears.
Glacier NP
reports 9 fatal bear attacks since the 1960s. Jasper NP has 3. Since
Yellowstone
was established in 1872, 8 people have been killed by bears in that park. To put this in perspective though: more people in Yellowstone have died from drowning, burns (after falling into hot springs), and suicide than have been killed by bears.
The real killer animal though is the tiger: both at
Chitwan
and the
Sundarbans
, significant numbers of people have been killed by this big cat. In 1988, 65 deaths were reported during a fourmonth period at the Bangladeshi part of the Sundarbans. It's unclear whether they occurred inside the core zone or also at the buffer zone, but the significant numbers can be explained due to the high population density around these parks.
Boat accidents (25+)
15 people died after a sightseeing boat sank in
Lake Ohrid
(2009) and at
Ha Long Bay
12 tourists were killed on a boat that sunk in February 2011. These are the only 2 WHS that I found with significant boating accidents that took a human toll.