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#1
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I have not heard of the condition of the poor drivers of those trains!
especially the driver of the Picc train as the bomb was in his carriage he must be in a terrible state!! |
#2
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Hobbayne wrote:
I have not heard of the condition of the poor drivers of those trains! especially the driver of the Picc train as the bomb was in his carriage he must be in a terrible state!! On the contrary, there were a number of news reports that said that the Piccadilly driver was able to lead some passengers from the front of the first car forwards along the track to Russell Square. At http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article...686310,00.html, it says he used a belt as a tourniquet to stem bleeding from a passenger's severe leg wound. According to a TfL press release yesterday, "One London Underground employee was injured in yesterday's attacks. He is currently in a critical condition." It gave no further details. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
#3
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On Sat, 09 Jul 2005 17:46:35 GMT, "Richard J."
wrote: Hobbayne wrote: I have not heard of the condition of the poor drivers of those trains! especially the driver of the Picc train as the bomb was in his carriage he must be in a terrible state!! On the contrary, there were a number of news reports that said that the Piccadilly driver was able to lead some passengers from the front of the first car forwards along the track to Russell Square. At http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article...686310,00.html, it says he used a belt as a tourniquet to stem bleeding from a passenger's severe leg wound. According to a TfL press release yesterday, "One London Underground employee was injured in yesterday's attacks. He is currently in a critical condition." It gave no further details. Erm I think you'll find the toruniquet was used by a Station Assistant at Russell Square. Rob. -- rob at robertwoolley dot co dot uk |
#4
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Robert Woolley wrote:
On Sat, 09 Jul 2005 17:46:35 GMT, "Richard J." wrote: Hobbayne wrote: I have not heard of the condition of the poor drivers of those trains! especially the driver of the Picc train as the bomb was in his carriage he must be in a terrible state!! On the contrary, there were a number of news reports that said that the Piccadilly driver was able to lead some passengers from the front of the first car forwards along the track to Russell Square. At http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article...686310,00.html, it says he used a belt as a tourniquet to stem bleeding from a passenger's severe leg wound. According to a TfL press release yesterday, "One London Underground employee was injured in yesterday's attacks. He is currently in a critical condition." It gave no further details. Erm I think you'll find the toruniquet was used by a Station Assistant at Russell Square. Possibly, but I was going by what The Times reported: "Ms Long [the station assistant] said the Tube driver had used the man's own belt to stem the loss of blood from his injury which, she said, had saved his life." The same report indicated that her actions were pretty heroic too, whether or not she applied the tourniquet. I think it's worth posting here what Tim O'Toole (MD of LU) said yesterday: "I would like to take this opportunity to pay tribute to all London Underground staff for their heroic response to yesterday's atrocities. Prior to the arrival of the emergency services they had to work in the most appalling and difficult of situations that most of us will thankfully never experience. In particular, I want to pay tribute to the staff of the Emergency Response Unit who played a critical role in removing the dead and injured from the carnage underground. Along with emergency service personnel who worked tirelessly throughout the day; they were a credit to London." Hear, hear. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
#5
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Richard J. wrote:
Hobbayne wrote: I have not heard of the condition of the poor drivers of those trains! especially the driver of the Picc train as the bomb was in his carriage he must be in a terrible state!! On the contrary, there were a number of news reports that said that the Piccadilly driver was able to lead some passengers from the front of the first car forwards along the track to Russell Square. At http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article...686310,00.html, it says he used a belt as a tourniquet to stem bleeding from a passenger's severe leg wound. Although I wasn't working on Thursday yesterday I was asked by several customers to thank our station staff who had handled the evacuation of the station so calmly and professionally. We are all well trained to handle incidents due to the King's Cross fire but some of the stories I've heard in various ways show that many staff went well beyond their training in an effort to comfort and help those caught up in this appalling event. According to a TfL press release yesterday, "One London Underground employee was injured in yesterday's attacks. He is currently in a critical condition." It gave no further details. All stations received a description of the person. I believe so far he hasn't been identified. -- Kat |
#6
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I was asked by several customers to thank our station staff who had handled
the evacuation of the station so calmly and professionally. Indeed, we all moan about the strikes and the "32 hour weeks for sitting on your arse", but how many 6-figure city slickers would have the same balls to do what comes naturally to these men and women? |
#7
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On Sat, 9 Jul 2005 19:22:25 +0100, Kat
wrote: Richard J. wrote: According to a TfL press release yesterday, "One London Underground employee was injured in yesterday's attacks. He is currently in a critical condition." It gave no further details. All stations received a description of the person. I believe so far he hasn't been identified. As far as I can everyone at LU got the description via a notice / E Mail. I have not heard if he has been identified either. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#8
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In message , Paul Corfield
writes According to a TfL press release yesterday, "One London Underground employee was injured in yesterday's attacks. He is currently in a critical condition." It gave no further details. All stations received a description of the person. I believe so far he hasn't been identified. As far as I can everyone at LU got the description via a notice / E Mail. I have not heard if he has been identified either. I'm told a name has been put forward that seems to fit the bill. Of course nothing is confirmed yet. -- Steve Fitzgerald has now left the building. You will find him in London's Docklands, E16, UK (please use the reply to address for email) |
#9
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Paul Weaver wrote:
I was asked by several customers to thank our station staff who had handled the evacuation of the station so calmly and professionally. Indeed, we all moan about the strikes and the "32 hour weeks for sitting on your arse", but how many 6-figure city slickers would have the same balls to do what comes naturally to these men and women? I don't know. But why pick "6-figure city slickers" as opposed to 15k office or retail workers in your example? Does it make your comparision work better? #Paul |
#10
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![]() "Hobbayne" wrote in message oups.com... I have not heard of the condition of the poor drivers of those trains! especially the driver of the Picc train as the bomb was in his carriage he must be in a terrible state!! Whilst I am not at liberty to divulge details, I can say that the driver of the train was not physically injured. Also that his actions in the immediate aftermath can only be described as heroism of the highest order. -- Cheers, Steve. Change from jealous to sad to reply. |
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