Worker at railway work falls after missing step

October 18, 2016 - 17:40

A worker at Hà Nội’s Cát Linh-Hà Đông Urban railway work was hospitalised late yesterday afternoon after falling from a height of five metres on the road.

A photo extracted from a clip showing a worker fell down from the height of 5 metres onto road at Cát Linh - Hà Đông Urban Railway work. — Photo vietnamplus.vn
Viet Nam News

HÀ NỘI — A worker at Hà Nội’s Cát Linh-Hà Đông Urban railway work was hospitalised late yesterday afternoon after falling from a height of five metres on the road.

Director of Railway Project Management Unit (PMU) Lê Kim Thành confirmed that male worker Lê Văn Linh, 19, of central Hà Tĩnh Province, was working at the Văn Quán Terminal construction site when he missed his footing while stepping down.

Thành said following the accident, the PMU asked constructors to review work safety and called on workers to improve awareness and obedience of work safety regulations.

Earlier, the urban railway work has resulted in fatal accidents which worry commuters traveling under the construction work.

On November 6, 2014, one person died and two others were injured after being crushed by a steel beam that dropped from a crane at the construction site of a railway bridge in Thanh Xuân District.

On December 27, 2014, scaffolding and a frame under construction at the project’s terminal in Hà Đông District collapsed while workers were pouring concrete. The debris damaged a taxi with four people inside and seriously injured nine construction workers. No fatalities were reported.

On August 25, 2015, a 2.5m steel bar fell onto the bonnet of a four-seater car on Hà Đông’s Quang Trung Street. Again the passengers were lucky to escape without injury, and the authorities ordered a halt to the construction work.

The final railway beams of the Cát Linh-Hà Đông urban railway were inserted one week ago, completing the basic infrastructure of the skytrain project.

It is expected that by the end of this year the project will complete construction, including all concrete work, stations and paths. Equipment will be installed from January next year, taking some six months.

The railway will be open for use next September.

The elevated railway project began in 2011 with investment of US$552 million, of which $169 million came from Chinese official development assistance. — VNS

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