The Sunday Guardian

Taiwan releases train crash suspect on bond

- CORRESPOND­ENT HUALIEN

Children play drums outside their home as part of Good Friday’s “Rompida de la Hora” (Breaking of the hour), after annual Holy Week procession­s were cancelled due to the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) in Calanda, on Friday.

A Taiwan court on Saturday released on bond the manager of a constructi­on site whose truck authoritie­s believe caused a train accident that killed at least 51 people, as family members mourned the dead at the crash site.

The crash on Friday was Taiwan’s worst rail accident in seven decades, when an express train hit the truck that had slid down a bank beside the track from the building site. The site’s manager is suspected of having failed to properly engage the truck’s brake.

The train, with almost 500 people aboard, was travelling from Taipei, the capital, to Taitung on the east coast when it derailed in a tunnel just north of the city of Hualien. Forty one people are in hospital, from among the 188 reported injured.

Prosecutor­s had applied to a court to detain the manager on charges of causing death by negligence, a justice ministry official told reporters on Saturday.

But a court in Hualien released the manager, Lee Yi-hsiang, on a bond of T$500,000 ($17,525), although it restricted him from leaving Taiwan for eight months and said he had to stay in Hualien.

The court said that while the truck’s fall into the path of the train was possibly due to negligence, there was “no possibilit­y of conspiracy”.

Yu Hsiu-duan, head of the Hualien prosecutor­s’ office, said they were not pleased with the decision.

“The court said there was no reason to keep him in custody,” she told reporters. “The court changed it to a surety of $T500,000.”

Lee’s court-appointed lawyer declined to comment to reporters as he left the court.

Lin Jinn-tsun, head of the Justice Ministry’s Prosecutor­ial Affairs Department, said they had lodged an appeal against the decision to release Lee on bond.

RESCUE WORK

Workers have begun moving the train’s rear portion, which was relatively unscathed as it had stopped outside the tunnel away from the accident spot. Other mangled sections remained in the tunnel, where fire department official Wu Liang-yun said more bodies were likely to be found.

“We’re still carrying out rescue work,” he added.

President Tsai Ing-wen visited hospitals in Hualien to speak to family members and survivors, thanking ordinary people and non-government groups for efforts to help.

“This shows the good side of Taiwanese society,” she said.

The government has ordered flags flown at half mast for three days in mourning, while the de facto French embassy in Taipei confirmed that one of its citizens had died in the crash.

The accident happened at the start of a long holiday weekend. The train was packed with tourists and residents going home for the traditiona­l Tomb Sweeping Day to clean the graves of ancestors.

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REUTERS

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