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WSWS : News
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: Britain
Rail companies could get immunity from prosecution following
Paddington train crash
By Mike Ingram
11 January 2000
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A decision by Britain's Attorney General Lord Williams that
all evidence presented to a public inquiry into the Paddington
train disaster in London will be excluded from any future legal
action means that rail companies and others suspected of corporate
manslaughter could escape prosecution.
The decision makes a mockery of investigations by the British
Transport Police into the crash that killed 31 people and injured
250 in October last year. Two trains collided outside Paddington
station after one of them passed a partially obscured red danger
signal. Initial investigations into the cause of the crash showed
that under-investment by Railtrackthe company responsible
for signalling and track maintenanceplayed a significant
role.
The company had received complaints from drivers on several
occasions that the now infamous Signal 109 was hidden from the
view, but had taken no action. It had planned to change the signal
the month the crash took place. This was six months after an independent
report recommended the siting of low-level signals on the 109
gantry as an extra aid to drivers. It took six meetings from April
to October last year for the change to be approved.
The rail industry as a whole was heavily criticised by the
Railway Inspectorate even prior to last October's disaster. Incidents
of Signal Passed at Danger (SPADs) were up 8 percent in 1998,
to 643. In an unpublished report on SPADs, the Inspectorate blamed
Railtrack and the train operating companies for the increasing
number of incidents. It said remedial action had been inadequate.
Railtrack and the two train companies involved in the Paddington
crash, Great Western and Thames, were expected to face charges
of corporate manslaughter. According to the Guardian newspaper,
criminal investigations were also under way into the Health &
Safety Executive. But any possible prosecution has been thwarted
by the promise of immunity, which means there are likely to be
no documents left that could support a case against individuals
or the companies.
Superintendent Tony Thompson of the British Transport Police
said: "If certain key documents aren't admissible, it tears
the heart out of any potential prosecution. A lot of the stuff
we will be relying on for a prosecution is going to be looked
at by the inquiry. Once it's admitted and subjected to the immunity,
there is virtually nothing left to base a case on."
Louise Christian, a solicitor representing eight of the victims'
families, accused the government of taking a political decision
to block prosecutions. "This means there has been a decision
by the government not to prosecute and that is very disturbing.
On something as political as the railways and the crash, the decision
to prosecute or not should be taken by a wholly independent authority
and not the government," she said.
See Also:
Railtrack announces
record profits in the aftermath of the British rail disaster
[9 November 1999]
Privatisation, deregulation
and the London rail disaster
[14 October 1999]
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