Tag: crash

  • Musk-run Tesla wins Autopilot crash case in US

    Musk-run Tesla wins Autopilot crash case in US

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    San Francisco: In some relief for Tesla CEO Elon Musk, jurors in an Autopilot-related 2019 crash in the US have given the verdict in favour of the electric car company.

    The jury in the California state court awarded plaintiff Justine Hsu, who sued Tesla in 2020, no damages, reports The Verge.

    The jurors found that the Tesla Autopilot software “wasn’t at fault in a crash where the car turned into a median on a city street while Autopilot was engaged”.

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    Tesla is under intense scrutiny for its Autopilot and its Full Self-Driving (FSD) driver assistance features.

    In February, Tesla received a clean chit from the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) in a fatal crash involving a Tesla Model S Autopilot system in 2021.

    The US transportation agency determined that the “probable cause of the Spring, Texas, electric vehicle crash was the driver’s excessive speed and failure to control his car”.

    As for Autopilot, the NTSB determined it wasn’t in use because the system is not programmed to not go faster than 30 mph on the street the Tesla last travelled.

    The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is also investigating self-driving claims made by Musk.

    The SEC probe is to determine if the electric car-maker flouted its rules in promoting its full-self driving (FSD) and Autopilot software.

    In February, Tesla paused the rollout of its Full Self-Driving beta software in the US and Canada following a recall of the system.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Schooled: LA superintendent gets crash course in California union politics

    Schooled: LA superintendent gets crash course in California union politics

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    “I am grateful that we reached an agreement with UTLA in a manner that reflects the dedicated work of our employees, provides a better academic experience for our students and raises the standards of compensation in Los Angeles and across the country,” Carvalho said in a statement.

    It was a critical moment for Carvalho, who received acclaim for his work in Miami but faces an entirely different labor environment in Los Angeles. A three-day support staff strike last month shuttered Los Angeles schools and kept more than 350,000 students out of class. He escaped a repeat by reaching an agreement with the powerful UTLA.

    “I’m hopeful that he learned some very valuable lessons,” UTLA President Cecily Myart-Cruz said in an interview. “Because he could have had two strikes within two months, and what would that have said about his leadership?”

    The superintendent has spoken frequently about the need to make up instructional time lost during the pandemic since arriving in Los Angeles. Another strike would have dealt another setback to that goal and put his fragile relationship with labor at risk.

    “I think he’s done an excellent job of positioning himself as an action-oriented leader, but I think he greatly underestimated the difference in the strength of labor unions at the bargaining table in California relative to Florida,” said Eric Premack, founder of the California Charter Schools Development Center, who used to do consulting work for Los Angeles Unified and other school districts.

    Carvalho came to the U.S. from Portugal as an undocumented immigrant after he graduated from high school, settling in South Florida. He worked construction and restaurant jobs, and was at times homeless before becoming a teacher. He later did communications work and lobbied for the Miami-Dade School District, which he went on to run for 13 years.

    He gained national prominence in the role, rebuffing entreaties to run for Congress and lead New York City Schools. But it wasn’t until 2022 that he left Miami, exhausted by his clashes with Gov. Ron DeSantis and other Republican politicians over school mask policies, curriculum restrictions and the treatment of LGBTQ students.

    “I had been approached regarding LAUSD four times over the past decade, and concerning the political dynamic in Florida — a state I love, great people, great talent — I thought this would be a better match for me,” Carvalho told reporters last week in Sacramento, where he came to lobby for more school funding and other education proposals.

    His 14-month tenure has been full of challenges, including a cyberattack that exposed families’ personal data, a student’s fatal opioid overdose at school and sliding enrollment and chronic absenteeism.

    But he’s faced the steepest learning curve with bargaining.

    In March, teachers, bus drivers and cafeteria workers walked picket lines, some holding cardboard signs deriding Carvalho’s fine suits and $440,000 salary. One included a picture of the superintendent surrounded by cartoon money bags with the caption “Mr. Miami Vice Grip.”

    The superintendent’s administration, meanwhile, was negotiating on behalf of a school board in which the majority of members are aligned with UTLA. Labor-friendly President Jackie Goldberg told reporters the board is “completely overjoyed” with the agreement reached by the union and superintendent.

    Carvalho has avoided another strike, for now. But for California superintendents and unions, the bargaining never really stops. The contract for support staff expires after next year, along with a massive chunk of federal coronavirus relief funding, compounding financial pressure on the district.

    But he insists that he’s happy to have Florida and its politics at a 2,000-mile distance.

    “We don’t ban books here. We don’t restrict curriculum. We acknowledge all individuals, regardless of gender, persuasion, whatever it is,” Carvalho said last week. “I think dealing with a different, more forceful union is a decent tradeoff I’m willing to take any day.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • 2 dead in US medical helicopter crash

    2 dead in US medical helicopter crash

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    Washington: A medical helicopter crashed in Shelby County in the US state of Alabama, killing two crew members.

    The helicopter was reportedly requested to assist in the extraction of a patient who went hiking in the area and suffered breathing problems and chest pains, reports Xinhua news agency.

    A Shelby County deputy called 911 to report the crash of the aircraft on Sunday evening.

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    “Deputies and other first responders are currently on the scene of an aircraft accident in the area of Bear Creek Road (Co Rd 43) and Mountain Oaks Drive,” the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office said in a social media post.

    The road is closed in both directions and will likely be closed for an extended period of time, the post read.

    There were three crew members onboard, according to Shelby County Sheriff’s Office Chief Deputy Clay Hammac.

    One of them was pronounced dead on the scene. Two others were taken to the hospital, where another was pronounced dead.

    The condition of the third crew member was not immediately known.

    The original patient — the hiker — was said to have been transported separately to a hospital.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • 9 killed in Army Black Hawk helicopter crash in Kentucky

    9 killed in Army Black Hawk helicopter crash in Kentucky

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    “Right now our focus is on the Soldiers and their families who were involved,” the statement added.

    Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear had said earlier that fatalities were expected, adding that police and emergency officials were responding.

    “The crash occurred in a field, some wooded area,” Kentucky State Police Trooper Sarah Burgess said at a news briefing. “At this time, there are no reports of residence damage.”

    Fort Campbell is located near the Tennessee border, about 60 miles (97 kilometers) northwest of Nashville, and the crash occurred in the Trigg County, Kentucky, community of Cadiz.

    Nick Tomaszewski, who lives about a mile from where the crash occurred, said he saw two helicopters flying over his house moments before the crash.

    “For whatever reason last night my wife and I were sitting there looking out on the back deck and I said “Wow, those two helicopters look low and they look kind of close to one another tonight,’” he said.

    The helicopters flew over and looped back around and moments later “we saw what looked like a firework went off in the sky.”

    “All of the lights in their helicopter went out. It was like they just poofed … and then we saw a huge glow like a fireball,” Tomaszewski said.

    Flyovers for training exercises happen almost daily and the helicopters typically fly low but not so close together, he said.

    “There were two back to back. We typically see one and then see another one a few minutes later, and we just saw two of them flying together last night,” he said.

    Members of the Kentucky Senate stood for a moment of silence Thursday morning in honor of the crash victims.

    “We do not know the extent of what has gone on, but I understand it is bad and there has been a substantial loss of life of our military,” Senate President Robert Stivers told the somber chamber.

    Last month, two Tennessee National Guard pilots were killed when their Black Hawk helicopter crashed along an Alabama highway during a training exercise.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Video: At least 20 Umrah pilgrims killed, 29 injured in Saudi Arabia bus crash

    Video: At least 20 Umrah pilgrims killed, 29 injured in Saudi Arabia bus crash

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    Riyadh: At least 20 Umrah pilgrims were killed and 29 injured after a bus crashed southwest of Saudi Arabia on Monday, Dubai-based Gulf News reported.

    The bus hit a bridge, tipped over, and caught fire.

    The accident, which occurred due to a brake failure, took place on the road joining Asir province and the city of Abha, Gulf News reported.

    The victims were on their way to Makkah to conduct Umrah.

    The injured have been taken to local medical facilities for treatment.

    Teams from the Red Crescent Authority and Saudi civil defence arrived quickly at the scene of the accident and roped off the area, reported Gulf News.

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  • 17 killed in bus crash in Bangladesh

    17 killed in bus crash in Bangladesh

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    Dhaka: At least 17 people were killed and more than 26 others injured when a passenger bus veered off the road and fell into a ditch in Bangladesh’s central Madaripur district, nearly 63 km south of the capital Dhaka on Sunday.

    Abdullahel Baki, a local Shibchar Highway Police official, told reporters that “The passenger bus felt into a roadside ditch, leaving 14 passengers dead on the spot and about 25-26 were injured”.

    He said three of the injured died on the way to local hospitals, Xinhua news agency reported.

    The accident occurred as its driver lost control over the vehicle and plunged the bus into a ditch on an expressway at about 7:30 a.m. local time.

    Bangladesh has one of the highest fatality rates for road accidents in the world mainly due to shoddy highways, poorly maintained vehicles, violation of traffic rules by inept drivers and lack of monitoring of the traffic department.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Fatal North Kashmir Bike Crash Leaves One Dead, Another Critical

    Fatal North Kashmir Bike Crash Leaves One Dead, Another Critical

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    SRINAGAR: In a tragic incident on Sunday evening, a 23-year-old biker lost his life and his pillion rider was critically injured after losing control of their motorcycle and colliding with a tree along the roadside in Watergam Rafiabad area of Baramulla district in North Kashmir. The accident resulted in the immediate death of the biker, while the passenger was rushed to the hospital for medical attention.

    According to reports, the bike collided with a tree near a petrol pump in Watergam Rafiabad, resulting in the death of the biker, identified as 23-year-old Musaib Ahmad Bhat, son of Abdul Hameed Bhat of Baghi Rehmat Iqbal Nagar Sopore.

    The incident also left his pillion rider, identified as 21-year-old Rashib Zahoor Saboon, son of Zahoor Ahmad of Baghi Rehmat Iqbal Nagar Sopore, with injuries. The injured passenger was immediately taken to SDH Sopore, where he was referred to SMHS Srinagar for specialized medical treatment. The cause of the accident is yet to be determined, and investigations are ongoing.

    In the meantime, the police became aware of the incident and, following legal procedures, released the body of Musaib to his family for final ceremonies.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Death toll in Egypt’s train crash rises to four

    Death toll in Egypt’s train crash rises to four

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    Cairo: The casualty toll of the train derailment on Tuesday night in Qalyub, an Egyptian city about 23 km north of the capital Cairo, has risen to four killed and 23 injured, the authorities said on Wednesday.

    All the wounded had been transferred to three national hospitals, 11 of whom were released after receiving necessary treatment, according to the Egyptian health ministry, Xinhua news agency reported.

    The train went through the “closed semaphore” at the Qalyub Train Station in Qalyubia Governorate and headed toward a blocked railway before colliding with the protection at the end of the railway, the Egyptian National Railways said in a statement on Tuesday.

    As a result, the locomotive and the first carriage were derailed, the statement said, adding the Egyptian Transport Ministry formed a committee to investigate the accident.

    Meanwhile, Egypt’s Public Prosecutor also ordered an investigation into the Qalyub train collision.

    Egypt’s railway system has long been troubled by poorly maintained equipment and poor administration, which frequently results in train derailments and crashes. At least 32 people were killed in a train collision in 2021 in Tahta, a city in southern Egypt. Later that year, a train derailed in Qalyubia, killing 11.

    (Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Greek leader faces political backlash after rail crash

    Greek leader faces political backlash after rail crash

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    ATHENS — Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis was supposed to be preparing to call an early election — instead he’s dealing with protestors throwing Molotov cocktails at police as a wave of public rage convulses Greece following a train crash that killed 57 people.

    Last week’s train collision was caused when a freight train and a passenger train were allowed on the same rail line. The station-master accused of causing the crash was charged with negligent homicide and jailed Sunday pending a trial.

    The crash has raised deeper questions about the functioning of the Greek state, following reports that Athens hadn’t updated its rail network to meet EU requirements and that the state rail company was accused of mismanagement.

    Mitsotakis initially blamed the incident on “tragic human error” but was forced to backtrack after he was accused to trying to cover up the government’s role. The first political victim was Transport Minister Kostas Karamanlis, who resigned soon after the accident. Mitsotakis put out a new message over the weekend saying: “We cannot, will not and must not hide behind human error.”

    “As prime minister, I owe everyone, but above all the relatives of the victims, a big SORRY. Both personal, and in the name of all those who have ruled the country for years,” Mitsotakis wrote on Facebook.

    His conservative New Democracy party is now weighing the political implications of the crash.

    Before Tuesday’s deadly event, it was widely expected that the government would hold a final Cabinet meeting where it would announce a rise in the minimum wage. Mitsotakis would then dissolve parliament, with the likeliest election date being April 9.

    But that’s now very uncertain. If the April 9 date slips away, alternatives range from a first round vote later in April, May or even July.

    “Anyone who hinted to the prime minister these days that we need to see what we do about the elections was kicked out of the meeting,” government spokesperson Giannis Oikonomou told Skai local TV. “It is not yet time to get into that kind of discussion.”

    Instead of election plans, the government is dealing with a massive outpouring of public rage at the accident that has seen large protest rallies and clashes between demonstrators and police.

    “When a national tragedy like this is underway, it is difficult to assess the political consequences,” said Alexis Routzounis, a researcher at pollster Kapa Research. “Society will demand clear explanations, and a careful and discreet response from the political leadership is paramount. For now, the political system is responding with understanding.”

    Opposition parties have so far kept a low profile, but that is starting to change.

    “Mitsotakis is well aware that the debate on the causes of the tragedy will not be avoided by the resignation of his [transport] minister, but becomes even more urgent,” the main opposition Syriza party said.

    Before the crash, New Democracy was comfortably ahead of its rivals, according to POLITICO’s poll of polls.

    GREECE NATIONAL PARLIAMENT ELECTION POLL OF POLLS

    For more polling data from across Europe visit POLITICO Poll of Polls.

    That lead came despite a growing series of problems, including high inflation, skyrocketing food prices, financial wrongdoing by conservative MPs, a wiretapping scandal and reports of a secret offer by Saudi Arabia to pay for football stadiums for Greece and Egypt if they agreed to team up and host the 2030 World Cup.

    “The government has managed to weather previous crises, including devastating wildfires in 2021 and the recent surveillance scandal, while suffering only a minor impact to its ratings,” said Wolfango Piccoli, co-founder of risk analysis company Teneo.

    He added that the government is now scrambling to ensure it’s not hurt politically by the crash.

    “It is following a similar strategy in wake of the train crash, with Mitsotakis playing a central role in establishing the narrative and swiftly announcing action aimed at getting ahead of the story,” Piccoli said.

    Missed warnings

    People are especially outraged because the tragedy appears to have been avoidable.

    The rail line was supposed to use a modern electronic light signaling and safety system called ETCS that was purchased in the early 2000s, but never worked.

    Even the current outdated system was not fully operational, with key signal lights always stuck on red due to technical failure and station managers only warning one another of approaching trains via walkie-talkie.

    The rail employees’ union sent three legal warning notes in recent months to the transport minister and rail companies asking for speedy upgrades to railway infrastructure.

    “We will not wait for the accident to happen to see them shed crocodile tears,” said one sent on February 7.

    In mid-February, the European Commission referred Greece to court for the eight-year delay in signing and publishing the contract between the national authorities and the company that manages rail infrastructure.

    Last April, the head of the automated train control system resigned, complaining that trains were running at 200 kilometres per hour without the safety system.

    The government even voted to allow Hellenic Train a five-year delay in paying any compensation for an accident or a death, while EU rules call for a 15-day time limit. The company said on Sunday it would not use the exemption.

    On Monday, Mitsotakis met with Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, and she pledged that Brussels would help Greece “to modernize its railways and improve their safety.”

    All of that is grim news for a party aiming to win a second term in office.

     “Historically, when the state, instead of stability, causes insecurity, it is primarily the current government that is affected, but also all the governing parties, because the tragedy brings back memories of similar dramas of the past,” Routzounis said.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • Greek prime minister apologizes over country’s deadliest train crash

    Greek prime minister apologizes over country’s deadliest train crash

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    Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis on Sunday apologized over the country’s deadliest train disaster and said he will ask Brussels for help to overhaul the country’s railway network as mass protests continued unabated. 

    “As prime minister, I owe everyone, but above all the relatives of the victims, a big SORRY,” Mitsotakis wrote on Facebook. “In the Greece of 2023, it is not possible for two trains to run on opposite sides of the same track without anyone noticing.”

    Two trains traveling at high speed in opposite directions on the same line collided head-on in Tempe in northern Greece on February 28, killing at least 57 people and injuring 85. A train with at least 350 on board including many university students hit a cargo train.

    “We can’t, won’t and shouldn’t hide behind human error,” added the prime minister. Mitsotakis previously said on March 1 that the disaster was “primarily down to a tragic human error.”

    The stationmaster for the city of Larissa faces charges of negligent homicide and admitted to some responsibility in his first court appearance on Sunday, according to Greek broadcaster ERT. 

    But Greece’s aging 2,550-kilometer rail network has been in desperate need of modernizing and has faced criticism for alleged mismanagement, unfit equipment and poor maintenance. 

    The deadly crash has prompted massive protests across the country about the government’s responsibility in the disaster as the first funerals of the victims were taking place. Thousands of people gathered on Sunday in front of the parliament in Athens, including several children. “This crime will not be covered up. We will be the voice of all the dead,” protesters chanted as they released black balloons into the sky.

    Clashes erupted between police and demonstrators during the protests in Athens, the country’s second-largest city of Thessaloniki and Larissa, the city where the accident took place, with police using tear gas and sound grenades.

    Protests have been staged over the last five days across the country and more have been called for the coming week. National rail services were halted as workers have been on strike since the crash.

    Mitsotakis, who is preparing for elections in the spring, has promised an independent expert committee will investigate the cause of the accident. He also said he will ask the European Commission and other EU capitals for help. 

    “I will immediately ask the European Commission and friendly countries for their contribution to know-how so that we can finally obtain modern trains,” said Mitsotakis. “And I will fight for additional community funding to quickly maintain and upgrade the existing network.”

    In the meantime, the European Public Prosecutor’s Office has launched an investigation into a contract for the upgrade of the signaling system and remote control on the Greek railway.

    “I can confirm that the EPPO has indeed an ongoing investigation, looking exclusively into possible damages to the financial interests in the EU,” an EPPO spokesperson told POLITICO, without providing any details regarding the “ongoing investigations in order not to endanger their outcome.”

    The Greek government quickly announced the formation of an experts’ committee to investigate the deadly train collision, causing strong reactions from the opposition who said the move doesn’t have cross-party approval and aims to take over the judicial investigation.

    “It is not possible for the person being audited to be an auditor at the same time,” main opposition party Syriza said in a statement.

    One member of the experts’ committee already has resigned.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )