The National - News

‘POOR EQUIPMENT CAUSED BRITISH BUILDER’S DEATH AT DOHA STADIUM’

Family tell of grief after fall from Qatar stadium, as coroner says managers should have known hoists were inadequate

- SETH JACOBSON London

Family and colleagues of Zac Cox, a British constructi­on worker who died in an accident at a Qatari World Cup 2022 venue in January last year, have described their horror at his death and frustratio­n at the lack of official co-operation in investigat­ions.

A British coroner concluded on Tuesday that “many managers [at Khalifa Internatio­nal Stadium in Doha] should have known they were effectivel­y asking their workers to rely on lethal, or potentiall­y lethal, equipment.”

After the verdict, Gavin Kelly – Mr Cox’s father-in-law and a senior aide to former prime minister Gordon Brown – wrote on Twitter that “the underlying cause of his death was crucial equipment failing”.

“This isn’t about one person making a mistake,” Mr Kelly said. “The report states that the equipment was uncertifie­d and the relevant companies knew at the time that it was in poor condition.

“In court, Zac’s colleague described some of the equipment supplied to them as ‘junk’ and ‘rubbish’.”

Mr Cox’s safety harness snapped when a catwalk on which he was working fell and sent him plunging 40 metres head-first. He died instantly from brain injuries and a broken neck.

On the same day, Mr Cox’s colleague Graham Vance was arrested and falsely accused of causing the death. Mr Vance was unable to leave Qatar for 12 months until he was acquitted.

Hazel Mayes and Ella Joseph, Mr Cox’s sisters-in-law, described their South African-born relative as “very, very kind. He brought as much joy as he could to those around him”.

They told the BBC’s Newsnight that as a result of “informatio­n we’ve gained from various sources, including colleagues”, they were not confident of any informatio­n they would receive from the Qatari body behind the World Cup planning, or from the contractor­s building the stadiums.

“It’s deeply distressin­g. We’ve lost a loved one, a very, very dear friend and no one has been held responsibl­e,” Ms Mayes said.

Ms Joseph said: “There’s no sense that anyone will be held accountabl­e and we’ve no confidence that lessons will be learnt and that other families won’t be put in this horrific situation.”

They showed a photograph of the scene of Mr Cox’s death.

“I find this probably the most traumatic piece of informatio­n that we’ve got,” Ms Mayes said.

“You can see this is where Zac apparently landed, you can see his safety harness, which has been cut. You can see the ropes, his shoe and you can see the dent in the structure, which is probably where he fell.”

A work colleague and friend, Jon Johnson, described Mr Cox’s death: “From the beginning of the lever hoist failing to Zac hitting the ground was about three and half seconds. It was a big fall.

“All of a sudden we heard a large bang and I looked over to see the chain running through the block of the lever hoist and the catwalk started falling away.

“Zac got pulled towards the slings that were holding the lever hoist up and the weight of the catwalk was entirely on him, on his line, which failed and the catwalk swung away leaving Zac to fall to the ground. I believe it was 39 metres that he fell.”

Newsnight said the two contractor­s working on the stadium, Midmac-Six and German company Pfeifer, had kept the family “in the dark”. In the end, Mr Cox’s family only managed to get the report into his death from unofficial channels.

“It was undertaken by the companies involved and by the supreme committee [overseeing the World Cup], but we’ve never been given that document formally,” Ms Joseph said. “It’s the clearest account of what happened to Zac and why.

“One of the key things in this report was the page that talks very clearly about the equipment being used and the fact that it was in poor condition. It had no third-party certificat­ion available yet it was labelled up and provided for Zac and his colleagues to use in their work.”

Ms Mayes said: “The fact that it’s been there and nothing’s happening to it and no one’s going to read it, and it’s not going to lead to any other sequence of events where people are actually going to be held to account is deeply distressin­g.

“In normal circumstan­ces that equipment should have been put in the bin without the relevant and appropriat­e certificat­ion. But it was used for a team of people who were working 40 metres above ground level. That’s beyond devastatin­g.”

Although the contractor­s said the equipment was fit for use, Mr Johnson said the teams had run out of lever hoists so some were borrowed.

“There were parts missing, they were rusty,” he said. “We knew this stuff was not suitable for use in such a project.

“The equipment from Pfeifer was second to none, the best in the world. We’d used it on other projects before, no problems. But we ran out. I believe that batch of lever hoists borrowed [from Midmac-Six] should never have been on site.”

In her findings, Coroner Veronica Hamilton-Deeley said: “The system after Christmas 2016 was chaotic, unprofessi­onal, unthinking and downright dangerous.

“I find that many men, many managers, should have known they were effectivel­y asking their workers to rely on lethal or potentiall­y lethal equipment.”

The family is “calling for a full, independen­t inquiry into the evidence”, said Ms Joseph.

“Until the full investigat­ion has been carried out by an impartial party, I think there are still unknowns,” Ms Mayes said.

The contractor­s denied any equipment was substandar­d and said they had kept in close contact “at all times” with the family and the British embassy.

“All official informatio­n in the possession of Pfeifer has been immediatel­y forwarded to the family,” the company said.

“The internal investigat­ion report does not constitute an official report conducted by the Qatari authoritie­s and therefore is not relevant.”

I find that many managers, should have known that they were effectivel­y asking their workers to rely on lethal or potentiall­y lethal equipment CORONER VERONICA HAMILTON-DEELEY

 ??  ?? The family of Zac Cox, above, could only obtain the report into his death from unofficial channels Danni Beach photograph­y
The family of Zac Cox, above, could only obtain the report into his death from unofficial channels Danni Beach photograph­y

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