Sunday 28 July 2013

Spanish Train Driver Francisco Garzon Charged With 79 Counts Of Homicide

SANTIAGO DE COMPOSTELA, Spain,
July 28 (Reuters) - The driver of a
Spanish high-speed train that
derailed and killed 79 people was
released pending trial on charges of
reckless homicide, a judge ruled on
Sunday night.

Francisco Garzon, 52, had been
under arrest since Thursday. He is
suspected of driving the train too
fast through a tight curve on the
outskirts of the northwestern
Spanish city of Santiago de
Compostela.
Examining Magistrate Luis Alaez
formally charged Garzon with "79
counts of homicide and numerous
offences of bodily harm, all of them
committed through professional
recklessness," the court said in a
statement.

In a closed-door hearing before
Judge Alaez, Garzon admitted
taking the curve too fast, blaming it
on a momentary lapse, according to
media reports.
Alaez set the following conditions of
release: Garzon must check in
regularly with the court, surrender
his passport and not drive trains.
None of the parties in the case,
which include state train operator
Renfe, state railway firm Adif and
two insurance companies, had
asked for Garzon to be jailed
pending trial, and he was not seen
as a flight risk, the court statement
said.

At 8:41 p.m. on Wednesday the
eight-carriage, high-speed train
slammed into a concrete wall,
crumpled, and some of the cars
caught fire. The impact was so
strong that one of the carriages was
thrown several metres high over an
embankment.
The death toll from Spain's worst
train disaster in decades rose to 79
after one injured person - a woman
from the United States - died on
Sunday.
Seventy people remain hospitalised
with injuries from the crash, 22 are
in critical condition.
Garzon has worked for Renfe for 30
years, 10 as a driver. His father also
worked on the rails and he grew up
in Renfe-owned housing in the
northwestern town of Monforte de
Lemos and went to school with
other train-workers' children.
After the accident he was
hospitalised with a head injury. On
Saturday he was released from the
hospital but remained in police
custody until he was taken to the
hearing at Santiago de Compostela's
main courthouse.
Neither lawyers nor members of
Garzon's family could be reached
for comment.

Alaez has been assigned to
investigate the case and will also
look at whether the train, the tracks
or the security system that slows
down the trains were at fault.

UP TO THE DRIVER
The Alvia train involved in the
accident, one of three types of high-
speed train services that run in
Spain, received a full maintenance
check on the morning of the
journey, the head of Renfe said, and
security systems were in good
shape.
"As far as we know, the train was in
perfect condition when it set off on
its journey," Renfe President Julio
Gomez-Pomar told newspaper ABC.

The Alvia trains run both on
traditional tracks, where drivers
must heed warning systems to
reduce speed, and on high-speed
tracks where a more sophisticated
security system will automatically
slow down trains that are going too
fast.
At the section of the track where
the accident happened, it was up to
the driver to respond to prompts to
slow down.
Gomez-Pomar rejected criticism
that the safety system was
insufficient, saying the debate "does
not make much sense".

CELEBRATIONS CANCELLED
The city of Santiago was meant to
be celebrating the yearly festival of
St. James on July 25, with thousands
of Christian pilgrims arriving after
walking the famous Camino de
Santiago ancient pilgrimage trail.
A week of concerts and other
cultural events were cancelled
after the train crash on the eve of
the festival. On Sunday, black
ribbons of mourning hung on the
empty stages that had been set up.
Pilgrims, many of them fresh off the
trail and carrying backpacks,
crammed into a standing-room-
only Mass in Santiago's centuries-
old cathedral where they were
asked to remember the victims of
the accident.
At the cathedral gates, along with
flowers and candles
commemorating the dead, some
people left walking sticks from
their journeys and others placed
shells, the symbol of St. James and
badge of honour for the pilgrims
who complete the journey.

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, who
visited the crash site after the
tragedy, is due to return on
Monday to Santiago, the city where
he was born, for an official funeral
ceremony for the victims.
Dolores Mato, 57, a shopkeeper who
works close to the ancient
cathedral, expressed sympathy and
grief for the victims and their
families, but also for Garzon, who
she said had been "crucified" in the
media. (Writing by Elisabeth
O'Leary; Editing by Fiona Ortiz,
Peter Graff, Sonya Hepinstall and
Stacey Joyce)

Wednesday 17 July 2013

Meskerem Legesse Dead: Pregnant Former Olympian Dies, Baby Saved In Connecticut

HARTFORD, Conn. -- A former
Olympic and professional runner
from Ethiopia who was due to give
birth in three weeks collapsed at a
restaurant and died, but doctors
saved her baby, her friends said
Wednesday.

Meskerem Legesse, 26, who lived in
Westport, was with her 2-year-old
son when she collapsed at a Chinese
restaurant in Hamden on Monday,
said her friend Fatima Sene. She
was transported to a hospital,
where she died and the baby was
saved, Sene said.The cause of death
was unclear. Sene said Legesse had
suffered heart problems in the
past.

"It is very sad. She was a very good
person," Sene said. "She would do
anything for anybody. And she
loved that little boy she left
behind."
Legesse ran in the 1,500-meter
competition at the Athens Olympics
in 2004. She finished 12th in a first-
round heat with a time of 4:18:03
and didn't advance to the medal
race. She moved on to a
professional running career in the
U.S., competing in events including
the Boston Indoor Games, Fifth
Avenue Mile in Manhattan and the
Millrose Games in New York. She
apparently hadn't raced within the
past few years.

Legesse's children are now with
their father, and arrangements are
being made to take Legesse's body
to Ethiopia, Sene said. Legesse was
planning to get married to the
children's father, she said.
Legesse's death was first reported
by Hartford-area CBS affiliate
WFSB-TV, which obtained
surveillance video from the
restaurant showing Legesse
entering with her son, sitting down
in a chair and collapsing to the floor
within seconds. Legesse had
ordered takeout and was picking it
up, said Sene's sister, Fatima Cisse,
another friend of Legesse.
Legesse knew the two sisters from a
hair salon down the street from the
Chinese restaurant, they said.
Hamden firefighters and
paramedics with American Medical
Response were called to the
restaurant at about 2 p.m. Monday
and performed CPR on a pregnant
woman who collapsed, according to
fire and police officials who did not
release the woman's name.
Doctors at Yale-New Haven Hospital
were able to save the baby because
of the CPR efforts both in the
restaurant and in the ambulance on
the way to the hospital, Hamden
Fire Chief David Berardesca said.

A spokeswoman for the state
medical examiner's office said the
agency declined to perform an
autopsy, citing Legesse's past health
problems. She declined to
elaborate.
A Yale-New Haven Hospital
spokesman on Wednesday said he
had no information about Legesse
being brought there Monday.

Meskerem Legesse Dead: Pregnant Former Olympian Dies, Baby Saved In Connecticut

HARTFORD, Conn. -- A former
Olympic and professional runner
from Ethiopia who was due to give
birth in three weeks collapsed at a
restaurant and died, but doctors
saved her baby, her friends said
Wednesday.

Meskerem Legesse, 26, who lived in
Westport, was with her 2-year-old
son when she collapsed at a Chinese
restaurant in Hamden on Monday,
said her friend Fatima Sene. She
was transported to a hospital,
where she died and the baby was
saved, Sene said.The cause of death
was unclear. Sene said Legesse had
suffered heart problems in the
past.

"It is very sad. She was a very good
person," Sene said. "She would do
anything for anybody. And she
loved that little boy she left
behind."
Legesse ran in the 1,500-meter
competition at the Athens Olympics
in 2004. She finished 12th in a first-
round heat with a time of 4:18:03
and didn't advance to the medal
race. She moved on to a
professional running career in the
U.S., competing in events including
the Boston Indoor Games, Fifth
Avenue Mile in Manhattan and the
Millrose Games in New York. She
apparently hadn't raced within the
past few years.

Legesse's children are now with
their father, and arrangements are
being made to take Legesse's body
to Ethiopia, Sene said. Legesse was
planning to get married to the
children's father, she said.
Legesse's death was first reported
by Hartford-area CBS affiliate
WFSB-TV, which obtained
surveillance video from the
restaurant showing Legesse
entering with her son, sitting down
in a chair and collapsing to the floor
within seconds. Legesse had
ordered takeout and was picking it
up, said Sene's sister, Fatima Cisse,
another friend of Legesse.
Legesse knew the two sisters from a
hair salon down the street from the
Chinese restaurant, they said.
Hamden firefighters and
paramedics with American Medical
Response were called to the
restaurant at about 2 p.m. Monday
and performed CPR on a pregnant
woman who collapsed, according to
fire and police officials who did not
release the woman's name.
Doctors at Yale-New Haven Hospital
were able to save the baby because
of the CPR efforts both in the
restaurant and in the ambulance on
the way to the hospital, Hamden
Fire Chief David Berardesca said.

A spokeswoman for the state
medical examiner's office said the
agency declined to perform an
autopsy, citing Legesse's past health
problems. She declined to
elaborate.
A Yale-New Haven Hospital
spokesman on Wednesday said he
had no information about Legesse
being brought there Monday.

Thursday 11 July 2013

Bob Filner Apologizes Amid Sexual Harassment Allegations: 'I Have Failed'

San Diego Mayor Bob Filner
apologized Thursday as allegations
that he sexually harassed women
continued to stir controversy.
"I begin today by apologizing to
you. I have diminished the office to
which you elected me. I have
reached into my heart and soul and
realize I must and will change my
behavior," he said in a statement,
according to NBC San Diego.

"As someone who has spent a
lifetime fighting for equality for all
people, I am embarrassed to admit
that I have failed to fully respect
the women who work for me and
with me, and that at times I have
intimidated them," Filner said in
the statement. "I am also humbled
to admit that I need help. I have
begun to work with professionals to
make changes in my behavior and
approach. In addition, my staff and
I will participate in sexual
harassment training provided by
the city. Please know that I fully
understand that only I am the one
who can make these changes."
Filner had refused to respond to
allegations earlier, even when
several high-profile San Diego
figures and former allies of the
mayor called for him to step down
over the controversy.

The AP reported earlier:
A letter to Filner from
former Councilwoman
Donna Frye obtained by
station KPBS said she
recently received "credible
evidence" that the mayor
harassed more than one
woman. She asked that the
City Council schedule a
special election to replace
him.
Frye didn't immediately
respond to a phone
message from The
Associated Press, but
was scheduled to
appear at a news
conference Thursday.
Frye's urging came two
days after Filner's
fiance, Bronwyn
Ingram, announced in
an email to her team of
volunteers that she was
breaking their
engagement.

"I am extremely
disappointed and
heartbroken, both for
what Team First Lady
could have
accomplished, and for
me, personally;
however, this is the only
action I can take given
the devolvement of our
personal relationship,"
Ingram wrote.

Bob Filner Apologizes Amid Sexual Harassment Allegations: 'I Have Failed'

San Diego Mayor Bob Filner
apologized Thursday as allegations
that he sexually harassed women
continued to stir controversy.
"I begin today by apologizing to
you. I have diminished the office to
which you elected me. I have
reached into my heart and soul and
realize I must and will change my
behavior," he said in a statement,
according to NBC San Diego.

"As someone who has spent a
lifetime fighting for equality for all
people, I am embarrassed to admit
that I have failed to fully respect
the women who work for me and
with me, and that at times I have
intimidated them," Filner said in
the statement. "I am also humbled
to admit that I need help. I have
begun to work with professionals to
make changes in my behavior and
approach. In addition, my staff and
I will participate in sexual
harassment training provided by
the city. Please know that I fully
understand that only I am the one
who can make these changes."
Filner had refused to respond to
allegations earlier, even when
several high-profile San Diego
figures and former allies of the
mayor called for him to step down
over the controversy.

The AP reported earlier:
A letter to Filner from
former Councilwoman
Donna Frye obtained by
station KPBS said she
recently received "credible
evidence" that the mayor
harassed more than one
woman. She asked that the
City Council schedule a
special election to replace
him.
Frye didn't immediately
respond to a phone
message from The
Associated Press, but
was scheduled to
appear at a news
conference Thursday.
Frye's urging came two
days after Filner's
fiance, Bronwyn
Ingram, announced in
an email to her team of
volunteers that she was
breaking their
engagement.

"I am extremely
disappointed and
heartbroken, both for
what Team First Lady
could have
accomplished, and for
me, personally;
however, this is the only
action I can take given
the devolvement of our
personal relationship,"
Ingram wrote.