Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Lives gone in a snap from an epidemic of selfie-obsession

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Railway engine driver G G Hemachandr­a was on a routine run from Colombo Fort to Aluthgama last Sunday.

Short ly after he passed the Kollupitiy­a Railway Station, about 100 meters ahead he noticed two children taking selfies.

“I tooted the horn. As the train moved closer I saw a smaller child running away from the track and then the other boy jumping off the track to the opposite side,’’ he remembered. “But the smaller boy rushed back towards the track and tried to cross the track. Both of them were hit by the train. Both boys panicked.’’

Mr Hemachandr­a has been summoned to the Coroner’s Court on June 29 to give evidence in the ongoing inquiry into the deaths of Ranaweera Arachchila­ge Madushan Ranaweera, 23, and Ranaweera Arachch i l a g e Thilakshan­a Ranweera, 11.

Their mother, Rajapaksha­lage Bandaraman­ike, 52, a resident of Anuradhapu­ra told the coroner in Colombo that they had been visiting relatives. She had picked up the eldest son who had arrived earlier from Singapore after completing his three- year degree in hotel management.

She explained that the two children were taking selfies at the railway tracks towards the sea shore.

“Around 6: 30 pm the boys were still taking pictures when the train approached with its front lights on,’’ she recalled.

“My elder son Madushan ran towards the sea side, while the younger one Thilakshan­a ran half way to our side and made a turn towards the brother when the elder son yelled, ‘malli paninna epa [don’t cross] and also got onto the track to drag him towards him, but both were knocked down by the train.”

The elder son suffered damage to the leg and was taken to the Colombo National Hospital in a three- wheeler, while the other son’s body was headless. The elder son also passed away few hours after admission while other son’s head was found the day after.

A relative of the victims who also witnessed the incident, W P Gunawarden­a, also explained that the boys went to the sea shore after another small boy who was in the group was eager to go to the beach.

The postmortem­s were done on Monday morning. The Judicial Medical Officer, Dr K K Joozari, explained that the 11 year- old- boy’s death was due to decapitati­on. The 23-year-old-boy’s postmortem was held by Judicial Medical Officer, Dr D. I . L Ratnayake, who explained that the boy had died of multiple injuries.

Colombo City Coroner, Ashroff Rumi, said that the two deaths were due to a train accident and ordered the police to produce the engine driver for further inquiry on 29th Friday.

The incident once again raised concerns over careless mobile phone users being distracted on roads, public places, places of high risk, or while driving.

On the same day of the incident at Kollupitiy­a and almost around the same time, another accident took place near the Kahawa Railway Station in Ambalangod­a last Sunday.

N B J Pradeep, the engine driver of the train from Matara to Colombo, told the Sunday times that a couple were taking selfies in middle of the railway track.

“I saw them from a distance of 300 feet. I blared the horn, but they were continuing to take photos. The man was wearing a helmet, while the woman was beside him when the train knocked them down,” he said.

He had applied the brakes, but the train came to a stop 200 feet away close to the Kahawa station.

They were a newly- married couple. The youth was killed and his wife is in a critical condition in hospital.

The police and railway authoritie­s are urging stronger law enforcemen­t.

The assistant superinten­dent of railway security, N P Jayantha, said that within a five month period, there have been more than 20 accidents involving people who used their phones while walking, taking selfies on rail tracks, or footboards of trains.

“During the year, there had been at

 ??  ?? Assistant superinten­dent of railway security, N P Jayantha. Pic by Priyantha Wickramaar­achchi
Assistant superinten­dent of railway security, N P Jayantha. Pic by Priyantha Wickramaar­achchi

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