Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 18

Thread: Corfu tragedy

  1. #1
    Administrator Kefalonia Oracle kefallon's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Bristol
    Posts
    2,343
    Blog Entries
    5
    Rep Power
    50

    Default Corfu tragedy

    As soon as i heard this i did not think it would be food poisoning- Now appears to be down to a faulty heater and carbon monoxide
    Corfu children killed by gas leak
    Robert and Christianne Shepherd
    Christianne and Robert died from carbon monoxide poisoning
    Two children who died on Corfu were killed by carbon monoxide poisoning, Greek officials have confirmed.

    A pathologist said very high levels of the gas were found in the bodies of Christianne Shepherd, seven and her brother Robert, six.

    The children were found dead in their hotel room next to their father Neil Shepherd and his partner Ruth Beatson.

    The police are preparing to issue charges of negligent manslaughter against the hotel, the BBC has learned.

    The charges are being considered against the owner of the Corcyra Palace Hotel, the hotel manager, its maintenance manager and an air conditioning technician, police sources said.

    The investigation is centred around a gas boiler adjacent to the family's room and experts are now carrying out an examination on that device, as well as air conditioning and water heater systems.

    A statement has been issued by Thomas Cook, the company the family were travelling with, which said the latest audit of the Louis Corcyra Beach Hotel showed that "the property met all of the Federation of Tour Operators' requirements".

    The travel operator also said it had moved remaining guests from bungalows and given all guests at the hotel "the opportunity to move to alternative hotels if they wish".

    The children's natural mother, Sharon Wood, 35, has visited the bodies of her children.

    Neil Shepherd
    Neil Shepherd has not been told about the deaths of his children

    Mr Shepherd, 38, and his partner, 27, have regained consciousness but have not yet received the news of the children's deaths.

    Mrs Wood and a man believed to be her husband were accompanied to the morgue by officials from the British Consul.

    She then visited the hotel and is understood to have entered the bungalow where her children died, before emerging 20 minutes later and being driven away.

    Hotel manager George Chrysikopoulos refused to comment on the cause of the children's deaths because of concerns over prejudicing the police investigation.

    But in a statement read in Greek and translated by an assistant, he said: "The hotel management are deeply saddened by this tragic loss of life and extend their most deepest condolences and sympathy to the family for their great loss at this time.


    CARBON MONOXIDE
    The gas is a product of incomplete combustion of natural or petroleum gas
    Blocked flues and chimneys mean the gas cannot escape and is therefore inhaled
    Fifty people in the UK die each year in their homes from accidental carbon monoxide poisoning.
    Inhalation reduces the blood's ability to carry oxygen which starves organs and cells
    Chimneys, flues and gas appliances and heating systems should be inspected regularly

    "The police are conducting a thorough investigation with which we have and will continue to co-operate."

    The two children, who lived with their mother in Horbury, near Wakefield, were described as "gorgeous" by family members.

    Ms Beatson's father, Stephen, told reporters the family had "absolutely no idea what had happened".

    He flew with Ms Beatson's mother, Helen, to the Greek island on Friday to be at their daughter's bedside.

    After they arrived, Ms Beatson regained consciousness and managed to smile - although she has not yet spoken to anyone.

    Mr Shepherd, who is separated from Mrs Wood, has also regained consciousness.

    Doctors say police will not be able to interview them until psychologists give the go-ahead.

    A letter written in pencil from a child called Ellie was placed on a table close to the scene of the tragedy along with a small paper plate covered in yellow flowers and petals.


    Sharon Wood

    Thomas Cook statement

    The message read: "Dear Christie, I hope you are alive. If you're not alive I will be very sad and Isabel too. From Ellie and Isabel."

    On Thursday morning, a cleaner at the hotel in the village of Gouvia discovered the two children dead in their room, and Ms Beatson and Mr Shepherd unconscious.

    The couple, from Horbury, were taken to Corfu General Hospital. The results of toxicology tests carried out on the children are due in 10 to 15 days.

    The family had been taking a week's holiday for the school half-term break.

    BBC correspondent Malcolm Brabant said other bungalows in the hotel have been closed as a precautionary measure but the hotel overall has not been evacuated, although it is due to shut soon as the holiday season is coming to an end.

    Thomas Cook also said it was working closely with the hospital and the police to gain further information and to support the family.

    It said: "Thomas Cook would like to express its deepest sympathy to the family and friends at this tragic time.

  2. #2
    Kefalonia Guru Janey's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Frome, Somerset
    Posts
    791
    Rep Power
    7

    Default Re: Corfu tragedy

    No matter how tragic it is, it is a very unforunate accident.
    When you think how many thousands of people that holiday abroad every year I think this is the first (that I have heard of) tradegy of this kind.
    It's almost as if it had been a bomb or similar that we would accept it easier.
    Not taking anything away from the familes involved, the worst thing in the world is losing your loved ones and especially any children, no matter how it happenes.
    All involved must be totally devasted and my heart goes out to them.

  3. #3
    Super Moderator Kefalonia Oracle john's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    bedlington, northumberland
    Posts
    3,220
    Blog Entries
    3
    Rep Power
    11

    Default Re: Corfu tragedy

    It is a very tragic story. What amazed me about this was the number of stories appearing in the press before the full facts emerged about the possibility of "ritual suicide" and murder and suicide.
    I hope these people hang their heads in shame. These parents and relatives have suffered more than enough without having these rumours hanging over them.

  4. #4
    Administrator Kefalonia Oracle kefallon's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Bristol
    Posts
    2,343
    Blog Entries
    5
    Rep Power
    50

    Default Re: Corfu tragedy

    Latest update on Corfu tragedy....

    Children’s bodies flown home

    The bodies of two British children killed by carbon monoxide poisoning in their Corfu hotel room on Thursday were flown home yesterday as police on the island interviewed hotel employees and maintenance staff in an attempt to find out who was responsible for the tragedy.

    A doctor who performed an autopsy on Christianne and Robert Shepherd, aged 7 and 6, said the lethal fumes they inhaled had probably leaked into their room from a faulty gas-powered boiler.

    The children’s father Neil Shepherd, who had been in the same bungalow with his partner Ruth Beatson, was yesterday still in intensive care. Beatson was in a stable condition. Police said both adults had been informed of the deaths yesterday.

    The children’s mother, Sharon Wood, yesterday accompanied the bodies on a flight back to Manchester.

    A prosecutor is expected to file manslaughter charges later this week, court officials said, without specifying who would be charged.

    Meanwhile the management of the Louis Corcyra Beach Hotel, in Corfu’s Gouvia Bay, said new water boilers had been installed two years ago and were checked annually.

    But experts said the boiler in question had probably been faulty and the hotel room may not have been adequately ventilated. “The boiler had probably been inadequately installed or badly maintained,” the president of the national cooperative for boiler maintenance experts, Evangelos Mallios, told Kathimerini.

    Professor of physics at Athens University Manthos Santamouris, said proper ventilation, as is customary practice, could have saved the children. “If a system of ventilation, changing the air in the room at least twice an hour, had been operating there would have been no problem,” he said. The experts called for immediate measures to upgrade hotel infrastructure.

    Tourism Minister Fanni Palli-Petralia pledged to revoke the hotel’s license if its management proves to be responsible for the deaths but stressed that Greek tourism “should not be stigmatized” by the incident, echoing the country’s worried hoteliers. Corfu is a top holiday destination for Britons - about 438,000 visited the island last year.

  5. #5
    Kefalonia Expert kaz's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    bristol
    Posts
    440
    Rep Power
    6

    Default Re: Corfu tragedy

    I understand that the hotel in question has another licence to run this year....anyone know if this is true?

    Back in 2002 we stayed in Gouvia, actually the apartments next door to the hotel.

    What are the companies doing to reassure us that will not happen again? It seems its been brushed under the carpet.

    My heart goes out to the family

  6. #6
    Super Moderator Kefalonia Oracle Phil's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Location
    East Cheshire
    Posts
    3,408
    Rep Power
    10

    Default Re: Corfu tragedy

    Did any of you see the Panorama program last night?

    I am sure I wasn't the only person on here to have suspected the cause from day one of the BBC News reports!

    It gets me so annoyed that tour companies rely on untrained reps to carry out such inspections.

    There are people on this board who are much better qualified to do this sort of H & S inspection and at relatively low cost. In fact I would suggest it would be cheaper to employ qualified people to do such inspections/reports rather than rely upon untrained reps to do so. The costs of litigation in this, and other, cases could be astronomical!

    This whole issue is so sad and could so easily have been avoided............


    Phil

    Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away.

    George Carlin

  7. #7
    Kefalonia Expert kaz's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    bristol
    Posts
    440
    Rep Power
    6

    Default Re: Corfu tragedy

    phil i saw the programme last night.

    Terrible, this has been a accident waiting to happen for a very long time. How many other places have got similar problems-still got no real answer on how tour companies are trying to protect the lives of their customers.

    The parents have asked if the building could be knocked down, and a memorial garden put in place, The answer they have received the building wont be used this year, i personally think this is disgusting!!

    I agree phil tour reps are not and should not do the health and safety checks on accomendation, this is totally unsatisfactory.

    Stop cutting corners and start protecting our families i say

  8. #8
    jed.w
    Guest jed.w's Avatar

    Default Re: Corfu tragedy

    I think this has been going on for many years.

    At Christmas 1986 we went to Lanzarote, stayed in some apartments in Puerto del Carmen. Very nice during the day but did get cold at night, so we had to put the little heater on. Didn't make a great deal of difference as there was a hole in one of the top windows, probably a stone thrown or something.

    I went to the reception desk to ask if someone could board it up, or better still replace the glass. The receptioist looked at me horrified and said 'Sir, that hole is in case the heater goes dicky'.

    Didn't realise at the time that she meant as a flue for poison fumes!

    jed.w 8-)

  9. #9

    Default Re: Corfu tragedy

    If I was taking my Grandchildren on holiday I think I would take a Carbon Monoxide detector with me, if the accommodation used gas, to make sure they were safe.


  10. #10
    Kefalonia Oracle mrs_horgota's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    mad house with 11 mindees
    Posts
    1,211
    Rep Power
    8

    Default Re: Corfu tragedy

    good idea moundaman, you can not be too safe, especially when abroad.

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •