Ex-Drayton Manor operator hit with £1 million fine after schoolgirl’s water ride death

Evha Jannath, aged 11, died after she was ejected from a boat on the Splash Canyon ride in 2017.
Evha Jannath
PA Media
Luke O'Reilly18 March 2021

The former operator of Drayton Manor has been fined £1m after a girl died on a ride, but the penalty will never be paid as it is in administration.

Evha Jannath was flung from a vessel on the Splash Canyon ride at Drayton Manor in Staffordshire during an end-of-year school trip with friends from Jameah Girls Academy in Leicester on May 9 2017.

Lawyers for the Health and Safety Executive (HSE), bringing a prosecution against the park for not properly ensuring the safety of its guests, said the theme park’s operators oversaw “systemic failures of safety” on the river rapids ride.

Drayton Manor had admitted breaching Section 3 of the Health and Safety at Work Act.

Police at the scene on the day of the incident
PA Media

Sentencing Drayton Manor Theme Parks Ltd at Stafford Crown Court on Thursday, Mr Justice Spencer said: “This was an utterly tragic waste of a young life.”

The judge said there was “no prospect of the fine being paid” given that the company operating the park at the time had since gone into administration.

But he added: “In my judgment it would be wholly inappropriate to do other than impose the fine which the offence merited.

“The public and Evha’s family must not be led to think that this serious offence, which resulted in the death of a child, can properly be met by only a nominal (financial) penalty.”

An air ambulance landing on the day of the incident
PA Media

He added: “I bear in mind there are other similar rides in the United Kingdom, I bear in mind that this theme park has been sold to another operator and the staff transferred over.

“It is important that lessons are learned and the seriousness of the defendant company’s failing in this case is marked by an appropriate punishment.”

The sentencing comes after a major blaze erupted at Drayton Manor last December.

The flames are thought to have broken out in a toilet block at the Tamworth attraction, with several fire crews from surrounding areas attending.

Emergency workers were able to bring the fire under control - and none of the park’s animals were harmed.

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