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Corruption the Killer in China Rail Crash: US Family

third eye

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Its the same unfortunate story line across all ( most) nations in Asia. This is not limited to China alone, India too suffers from the same malaise.....

Corruption the Killer in China Rail Crash: US Family | The Jakarta Globe

Shanghai. More than a year after a train crash in China left his parents dead and his brother disabled, American Leo Cao still feels bitter grief, but also anger at what he sees as the real killer — corruption.

Leo left China as a 10-year-old, as his parents closed their small hardware shop and sought a better life in the United States. His first trip back, 20 years later, was to identify their bodies.

The Cao family became US citizens and worked hard to make their way in their new home, both adults taking jobs as caretakers at New York’s LaGuardia Airport, and saving up to treat themselves to occasional trips to their native land.

Before boarding the second carriage of train D301 in Beijing, bound for his ancestral province of Fujian, Erxing Cao proudly took a photo of a gleaming bullet train on his mobile phone.

It was part of the largest high-speed rail network in the world — seen by Beijing as a symbol of China’s advance.

Hours later the 56-year-old lay dead in twisted wreckage, killed instantly by massive head injuries when his train smashed into another.

“He had a passion to see China develop and become a global power, but it’s the same development that pretty much killed him,” said his son.

His mother Zeng Rong Chen, also 56, was pronounced dead at the hospital. A pouch holding $10,000 in cash she was carrying disappeared, haunting family members who fear looting may have delayed her medical treatment.

“I just hate to think that whatever my mother was carrying might have contributed to her death — if something might have happened between the crash site and the hospital,” Leo said.

His parents were among at least 40 people killed in the accident near Wenzhou on July 23 last year, China’s worst since 2008.

It put the spotlight on the country’s breakneck development — and rampant government corruption.

China has more than 7,700 kilometers (4,800 miles) of high-speed rail lines and plans to more than double that by 2015. A new line between the northern cities of Dalian and Harbin opens Saturday, to be followed soon by another between Beijing and the southern city of Guangzhou.

A government report on the Wenzhou crash blamed it on design flaws and poor management, saying former railways minister Liu Zhijun — architect of the high-speed system — was responsible for “irregularities” in design and safety.

He had been removed from his job five months before the accident, and days ahead of a Communist Party congress earlier this month he was formally expelled from the organization for “serious disciplinary violations”.

That cleared the way for his prosecution for taking massive bribes in return for awarding contracts, though a trial date has yet to be announced.

After the Communist congress Xi Jinping, the newly proclaimed head of the ruling party, said corruption could “kill” the country if not addressed. But while officials have vowed repeatedly to tackle the problem, campaigns have stopped short of rooting out graft at the very top beyond a few individuals.

Leo sees institutionalized graft as the real culprit of Wenzhou, beyond a single individual.

“Corruption killed my parents — the rapid expansion (of the railway network) and the ‘business as usual’ system in China where bribes are a way to conduct business,” he told AFP in an interview in Shanghai.

“I have no personal qualms with that guy,” he said, referring to Liu. “It’s the system. The signal system went into operation without testing and that only happens when bribes are paid.”

‘Looking at him breaks my heart’

Nearly 200 people were injured in the crash, among them his older brother Henry Cao, 33.

The last thing Henry remembers before the collision was an uncontrollable jolting, like an earthquake.

“The train car was shaking — lights were off — it felt like I was falling and I said a prayer,” he told AFP. “Then I was in a dreamy state. It was like I was trapped in pain but I couldn’t escape.”

He lost his spleen and a kidney, among other injuries. Now he suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder and recently had part of his intestine removed because of complications.

“Looking at him breaks my heart. He’s half the man he used to be, mentally and physically,” said Leo, who is seeking what he deems fair compensation from the Chinese authorities.

The government’s Ministry of Railways offered $145,000 each for his parents — the same level as Chinese victims — based on 20 years of average salary in Zhejiang province, where the crash occurred.

The ministry offered Henry Cao $85,000 based on his earnings from running a trading business — which has collapsed as a result of his injuries — and has refused an increase.

“We’re a humble family in the US. My parents were janitors. We’re not seeking the moon. What I’m doing is trying to get some compensation for my brother,” said Leo, a doctoral student at the University of North Carolina.

“We’re pretty much a striving immigrant family that pursued the American Dream and sort of made it until the crash.”

He is now contemplating lodging a lawsuit through a Shanghai court, which he fully expects to lose. “Corruption killed my parents,” he repeated. “Unfortunately, I can’t take the Chinese to court for corruption.”

Agence France-Presse
 
“It’s the system. The signal system went into operation without testing and that only happens when bribes are paid"
wrong blame. he does not have any evidence to blame it.

and btw you can try to find out how many indian dies because of train accident every year.(even there are not high speed trains)
it can surely shock you.
 
“It’s the system. The signal system went into operation without testing and that only happens when bribes are paid"
wrong blame. he does not have any evidence to blame it.

and btw you can try to find out how many indian dies because of train accident every year.(even there are not high speed trains)
it can surely shock you.

Where is the connection with the subject ?
 
The thing is this story gets some attention while the family members of those who died in Indian train accidents don't get their stories told by the media. The numbers of train accidents and passengers killed in India are very shocking. List of Indian rail incidents - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

It's a tragic event that led to innocent deaths because of corruption involved, compensation were paid (this is never enough to bring the deaths back to life). Let this be a lesson China, but judging from the frequent accidents in India it seems like they still have not learned their lessons.
 
What does Indian Accident have to do with this case, you can say the OP is a Chinese accident, without a further and detail investigation, you cannot claim anything is truth, but relating the incident to an Indian accident is just uncalled for.

I don't know if China have Persume innocent until proven guilty. Until a detail report have been show, anyone cannot say for sure what caused the accident. I can cross the road one day and got hit by a car, i can blame the car's brake is fault, i can blame the traffic light malfunctioned, is it true tho? No, until a detail investigation is done, no one should be allow to say what cause the accident.

corruption and imcompentent management, and Negligence is different case, you can be corrupted but as long as you did your job right, there should be no consequence. You can be an imcompentent, again, if you did your job right that should be ok too, the only case that is not ok is when there are Negligence involve, then we should start talking about compensation or responsibility.
 
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