Vietnam’s railway boss vows
resignations of subordinates if accidents persist
Three high-profile train crashes in
Vietnam occurred in a single week last month, raising serious concerns for
commuter safety
A locomotive and a
freight train badly damaged after a collision in Quang Nam Province in
central Vietnam on May 26, 2018. Photo: Tuoi Tre
The top
leader at the state-run corporation responsible for train services between
Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City has warned that the directors of its subsidiaries
will be forced to resign or face dismissal from their posts if the current
spate of accidents continues.
In a stern
statement released after a series of accidents last month, Vu Ta Tung,
general director of the Vietnam Railway Corporation, asked all employees to
abide strictly by safety regulations in the coming months, warning that
should any crashes occur subsidiary leaders might find themselves on the
company chopping block.
For employees,
disciplinary actions could include a lower grade on their performance report,
ultimately affecting their pay rate, Tung added.
He fell
short of mentioning any consequence he himself might face should an accident
occur.
Though
smartphones and tablets are strictly prohibited for train operators,
dispatchers, and conductors who are on duty, Tung statement pointed the
finger at employees who caused accidents while being distracted by mobile
games and social media.
The railway
boss and his deputy Doan Duy Hoach were ‘seriously criticized’ this week for holding
responsibility for a spate of train accidents that claimed two lives in May.
On May 24, a
passenger train traveling from Hanoi collided with a truck in the
north-central province of Thanh Hoa, killing two people and injuring at least
six others.
On May 26,
another train with a rock-carrying carriage derailed in neighboring Nghe An
Province, but no casualties were reported.
The same
day, a freight train slammed
into a locomotive which was moving cars at a station in the central
Vietnamese province of Quang Nam, causing many carriages to derail and goods
to be thrown off the train.
The
accidents further dampened public confidence on the safety of Vietnamese
railways system following the discovery last year that a US$300 million
automatic railway signaling system critical to preventing collisions and
derailments was ineffective despite
high expectations.
Tuoi Tre News
|
Thứ Năm, 14 tháng 6, 2018
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