San Francisco Chronicle

Truck owner behind fatal railway wreck apologizes

- By Huizhong Wu Huizhong Wu is an Associated Press writer.

TAIPEI, Taiwan — The owner of a constructi­on truck that caused Taiwan’s worst rail accident in decades, killing 48 people, apologized in tears while being led away from his home by police on Sunday. The empty truck’s emergency brake was not properly engaged, according to the government’s disaster relief center.

An investigat­ion is under way as to how exactly Lee YiHsiang’s vehicle slid down onto the tracks Friday from a nearby constructi­on site on the mountainou­s coast of eastern Hualien county.

The truck was hit by a passenger train carrying 494 people, which derailed just before entering a tunnel, crushing many passengers inside the mangled train carriages.

The death toll was revised down to 48 on Sunday, after rescuers initially said 51 were killed. The changes came after some body parts were found to belong to one individual, a spokespers­on for the Central Emergency Operation Center said. At least 198 people were injured.

“I have caused a serious accident on the Taiwan Railway Administra­tions’ Taroko train number 480 during this year’s Tomb Sweeping Holidays, causing deaths and injuries. To this I express my remorse and my sincerest apologies,” said Lee, who is also the constructi­on site’s manager. “I will cooperate with the authoritie­s’ investigat­ion fully, and take responsibi­lity.”

Prosecutor­s previously said they were seeking an arrest warrant for the truck’s owner. The Hualien district court initially allowed Lee to post bail of 500,000 new Taiwan dollars (U.S. $17,516), but the decision was reversed Sunday when a higher court in Hualien rescinded the lower court’s decision to allow bail, Taiwan’s Central News Agency reported.

Train travel is popular during Taiwan’s fourday Tomb Sweeping holiday, when families return to their hometowns to pay respects at the graves of their elders.

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