The New Zealand Herald

‘I thought I’d killed a kid’

Survivor comes face to face with driver whose fast reactions saved his life as country marks Rail Safety Week

- Jamie Morton

Four-tenths of a second. That’s the precise difference, Dan Hanara says, that stood between his life and death when he wandered on to a Hamilton railway line as a toddler.

Ahead of a rail safety campaign kicking off today, the 34-year-old has been reunited with the train driver whose quick actions likely saved him.

On that day, back in 1985, a 22-month-old Hanara slipped away from his family as his mother was getting his siblings ready for school.

As he crossed a culvert and stepped on to the tracks that lay alongside his Claudeland­s home, KiwiRail driver Brian Roberts was making his usual morning run.

Roberts knew that stretch well, and it quickly struck him there was a strange object ahead.

“Then I saw this object starting to move,” he recalled.

With around 100m between his engine and Hanara, he immediatel­y activated the brakes, which began to slow the train about 15 seconds later.

The train gradually screeched to a halt, but not before knocking Hanara from his feet. Roberts assumed the worst.

’“I thought I’d killed a kid,” he said. “But then we heard him crying . . . my mate got out, had a look, and we were relieved to see he was actually still alive.”

The train had partly driven over Hanara, leaving him with cuts, bruises, a broken leg and a deep gash in his thigh.

But because there was little ballast on the trackbed, there was just enough clearance for the train not to have crushed him.

Roberts said it was also fortunate the accident had occurred on a long, straight stretch.

“If I’d come around a corner, there’s no way I could have stopped in time.”

Hanara still bore the scar he received — “it’s been a bit of a coolstory kind of scar” — and hadn’t forgotten what almost became of him.

“Growing up, I remember lots of adults saying, ‘Oh, you’re the miracle child, you’re the kid who beat the train’ — but it still never really hit home, just the sheer magnitude of danger, until I got older.”

Now a mechanical engineer based in Sydney, Hanara had even calculated the odds he faced.

“I’ve worked out the maths — if he was 0.4 seconds slower to act, I would have been a goner, no doubt.”

He’d spent his life wondering who the driver was that saved his life, and

how he might get to thank him.

That moment came when the two men met recently at an Auckland rail depot, shared a hug, and began telling each other about their lives.

“Dan told me how he’s got a baby coming next month . . . it was emotional, a bit of closure, really,” Roberts said.

“One thing I got asked was, do I still think about it when I drive over that crossing, and I said, yes, yes of course I do.”

Hanara wanted one message to come from his scrape with death: “tracks are for trains”.

“I run a team of 30 at work and safety is our life. With what happened to me . . . I was lucky.

“In all reason, I shouldn’t be here.” Other Kiwis haven’t been as fortunate — in the past six years, more than 100 people have died in collisions with trains.

“Each of those deaths was an individual tragedy that impacted on the lives of families, friends, communitie­s, our staff and those in the emergency services who deal with the aftermath,” KiwiRail chief executive Peter Reidy said.

In the 12 months to June, there were 71 near misses reported between pedestrian­s and trains at level crossings.

That compared to 17 near misses with pedestrian­s reported in the 12 months to June 2013, reflecting a global trend of an increase in reported rail incidents involving pedestrian­s.

“While people are aware of the risk from trains, in many cases the knowledge of that risk isn’t translatin­g into action,” Reidy said.

Some people had grown complacent around the tracks, and there were now further risks such as distractio­n with smartphone­s.

As part of Rail Safety Week, KiwiRail and other agencies will be sharing rail safety messages at level crossings and schools throughout the country. Its message was simple: “Look left, look right for trains.”

 ??  ?? Train driver Brian Roberts (left) whose speedy reaction saved Dan Hanara when he was a toddler.
Train driver Brian Roberts (left) whose speedy reaction saved Dan Hanara when he was a toddler.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand