A woman's hair was set on
fire by a gang of teenage thugs during a night of chaos on the Luas Red line. Many residents in Dublin's south-central area
are said to be afraid to use public transport following almost "daily
occurrences" of anti-social behaviour and attacks in the area. A serious incident was reported on the Luas
Red Line on the night of January 11 by the tram's driver while on-route to
Tallaght.
Luas
operator Transdev has since apologised for its security's
"unsatisfactory" response time after a passenger's hair was set
alight by a number of youths. In a further report, the driver said the
teenagers responsible were smoking and making racist comments, which prompted
him to call for security again.
He
said other passengers onboard were "in uproar" during the incident
which took place as the tram was heading from the city centre to Kylemore.
"Passengers
were shocked that no security ever [responded to] this incident on the
tram," he said in a logged complaint to the operator.
"Some
passengers that were on the tram from The Point to Tallaght never saw a
security guard and many advised me they were going to social media about this.
"Passengers
heard both my calls to security and the response as they were bet up against
the glass calling for help and couldn't believe what they were hearing."
The
driver is now calling for Transdev to employ permanent security for its trams.
Luas Security Under Review Following Night Of Terror On The RED-LINE : |
"I
am embarrassed to work for the company after tonight's lack of support, for
myself and the passengers," he continued.
"Luas
put 'help fight racism' posters up at their platforms, and in 2020 a woman is
set alight on a tram and for a 40-minute journey not one security guard was to
be seen. This needs to change. A Saturday night on public transport and zero
security - a shambles."
In
response, a Transdev spokesperson acknowledged that Luas security staff were
slow in responding to this incident.
"Security
was deployed elsewhere on the lines at this particular time and did not board
the tram on which the incident occurred quickly enough.
"This
was not satisfactory, and we apologise to Luas customers and those
affected," they added.
"Security
arrangements are continuously under review and have been recently reassessed,
particularly in light of recently publicised incidents of anti-social behaviour
involving groups of teens in local communities along the Grand Canal close to
Luas stops."
Ballyfermot
and Drimnagh councillor Daithí Doolan told the Irish Independent attacks on and
around the Luas occur almost every day.
"I
use the Luas here all the time with my kids and am very aware of these serious
incidents," he said.
"There's
almost a reign of terror that's particularly targeted at foreign nationals.
I've heard numerous stories about these gangs verbally and physically attacking
people on the Luas at Drimnagh and also around the canal.
"If we want to ensure
that people can travel safely on public transport, Gardaí have to be there to
protect them and respond accordingly when they are called."
ENDS:
No comments:
Post a Comment