Khaleej Times

Two children in ‘miracle’ survival from Thunder Rivers ride tragedy

- AP

sydney — Two children are fortunate to be alive, police said on Wednesday, after they were thrown clear and survived an accident that killed their mothers and two other people on a river rapids ride at a popular theme park in Australia.

Two men and two women died in the accident on Tuesday at the Dreamworld park on Queensland state’s Gold Coast, Queensland Police Assistant Commission­er Brian Codd said.

The 30-year-old Thunder River Rapids ride whisks people in circular rafts along a fast-moving, man-made river, with a conveyor belt helping move the rafts through the water. Closed-circuit television footage showed the ride was ending when two rafts collided, Codd said.

A 10-year-old boy and a 12-year-old girl were thrown clear as the six-person raft upturned and trapped the adults against the conveyor belt, he said.

“In terms of how they escaped, maybe through the providence of God or somebody, but it seems from what I’ve seen almost a miracle that anybody came out of that,” Codd said. “If we’re going to be thankful for anything, people were killed in the dreamworld park accident I’m thankful for that.” The children had been traumatize­d and were being cared for by family, he said.

Kim Dorsett, of Canberra, confirmed that two of the victims were her children: Kate Goodchild, 32, and Luke Dorsett, 35.

“I have two granddaugh­ters an 8-month-old and a 12-yearold - and it truly breaks my heart to know that my 8-month-old is never going to get to know her mum,” she told The Courier-Mail newspaper.

She said the 12-year-old “is completely devastated — she is blaming herself for what has happened.”

Kim Dorsett was on a family vacation with her children and Goodchild’s daughters from Canberra. Luke Dorsett’s partner, Roozi Araghi, 38, of Canberra, was also killed. —

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