National authorities are playing with the ‘fault’ ball

 

 

Even if we are living in 21 century, some things and actions are running as we are in the ancient times. A plain crashed in mountains in Romania, but all 8 passengers and pilot survived. In that plain were 6 doctors who were going to salve a life, one famous pilot and one young first officer.

 

One of the passengers called to the nation emergency number, 112, and he clearly identified the location where they were. The police immediately send the national authorities to save them. After 8 hours of searching 2 local people found 6 survivors and 2 dead. What was happened?

After so many hours, 400 authorised people could not found the victims of the tragedy. But who is in fault? Who must pay for that 2 people who died because of a wrong system?

The national authorities are playing with the fault. They are passing the ‘fault’ ball to different companies. In the first place ROMATSA, the national emergency system, was guilty for not implicate themselves in the rescue.  Then it was risen the question ‘why the government did not move a single finger to save them?’ And the questions can continue. Why we bought sophisticated systems and let people to day? How cannot be identified an iPhone in 2014? How many tragedy must happened until we will realise that something is wrong in this system?

Romania lost 2 heroes that day. One of them was the pilot, Adrian Iovan, who gave his life to save the others and the other one was a young women who started her life as a doctor. Both of them died to salve lives. The conclusion of this tragic event was that no one has any fault and nothing should be changed.