When news happens, text LT and your photos and videos to 80360. Or contact us by email or phone.
|
|
JOIN THE DEBATE BY ADDING YOUR COMMENTS ON THESE STORIES Registering to post comments on the Lancashire Telegraph website only takes a few seconds. Click here to go to the registration page. |
10:30am Thursday 11th March 2010 in
THE death of an 11-year-old who slipped on ice as she made her way to school was a ‘tragic accident’, a coroner said.
Naeemah Achha, carrying her school bag in one hand and her lunch bag in the other, fell forward, making no attempt to break her fall, an inquest heard.
She suffered such severe head injuries that later the same day a neuro-surgeon declared them ‘non-survivable’.
Her mother witnessed the fall on the pavement outside St Michael and St John School, Swallow Drive, Blackburn.
In the aftermath of the incident there was anger in the community that the borough council was not gritting pavements.
But deputy assistant coroner Elaine Block described Naeemah’s death as a ‘tragic accident’.
Recording a verdict of accidental death, she said thousands of people had skidded and slipped their way to work and school that day.
“Naeemah fell in such a way that she didn’t just suffer bruises or even a broken bone,” said Mrs Block.
“She banged her head causing a catastrophic injury which meant she was already a very, very poorly child by the time she reached the Royal Blackburn Hospital.”
The inquest heard that Naeemah’s parents, Rafiq and Sayeeda, were too distressed to attend the hearing.
Mrs Achha’s statement was read to the inquest and in it she told how she had set off to walk to school on January 14 with Naeemah and her two sons, aged eight and six.
She said the roads and pavements were very icy and covered in hard-packed snow.
As they arrived at school Naeemah said they were late and she and one of her brothers went in through the office entrance.
Mrs Achha went to the main gate with her youngest child and, after seeing him into school, turned to see her other two children walking back up Swallow Drive towards the main gate. She then saw her daughter fall.
Other parents and staff were quickly on hand before Naeemah was taken by ambulance to Royal Blackburn Hospital. Following a scan she was transferred to Royal Manchester Children’s hospital where she died the following day.
In her statement Mrs Achha described Naeemah as ‘a very happy, helpful and intelligent girl who always had a smile on her face.’ After the hearing, the council’s Conservative regeneration chief Alan Cottam, who is responsible for the borough’s roads, said: “I would agree with the verdict. It was a tragic accident.
“It was very sad and it could have happened anywhere in the country.”
But community leader Hussain Akhtar, a former Labour councillor for the area, said: “The coroner knows more than I do but I am surprised.
"If the pavement had been gritted the result would have been different.”
Comments(9)
karltop
says...
11:38am Thu 11 Mar 10
samspence
says...
1:10pm Thu 11 Mar 10
A Darener
says...
1:43pm Thu 11 Mar 10
adelaideblue
says...
2:08am Fri 12 Mar 10
daisy7
says...
6:28pm Fri 12 Mar 10
woodyads
says...
12:05am Sat 13 Mar 10
Michael@ClitheroeSince58
says...
11:41pm Sat 13 Mar 10
AnthonyUK
says...
7:31am Mon 15 Mar 10
woodyads wrote:The street wouldn't melt you stupid oaf the ice would! And a calorgas roofing torch is only 70quid and a propane gas 13kg cylinder around £20;some football grounds were melting the ice outside with calorgas torches to make their entrances to the grounds navigable by foot;had this been implemented then there would be NO accidents at all with slips and falls whatsoever.
I can't believe some of the idiotic comments on here. Anthony - would you suggest that every street outside every school in Blackburn is melted by this gas torch? Or even the UK? And what would be the cost of this to the taxpayer? What a ridiculous suggestion. This was a tragic accident - nothing more, nothing less. The sad fact is that they happen, and no matter what measures are put into place, no matter how much you wrap the population up in cotton wool, they will still happen under any situation. As for the comments about the children crossing Barbara Castle Way, as a teacher myself I regularly stop traffic when crossing a class over a road. It is much safer than just using a crossing as traffic is firstly forced to stop by adults in the road providing a tunnel for the children to move through safely, rather than chancing it with a pelican crossing that cowboy drivers tend to pre-empt. I wish the staff and pupils of SMSJ well. The last thing that they need at the moment is more unnecessary publicity when they are still trying to overcome their loss. People getting on their backs about petty things they know absolutely nothing about does not help whatsoever.
Enter your postcode, town or place name
Search jobs in and around Lancashire
Search Now »
Find the right person for you
Search Now »
Search houses, flats, and all properties
Search Now »
Search new & used cars in and around Lancashire
Search Now »
AnthonyUK says...
10:47am Thu 11 Mar 10