SYDNEY (Reuters) – An Australian court has ordered theme park operator Ardent Leisure Group Ltd
A brother and sister were among the two men and two women who died almost instantly in 2016, when two rafts collided before flipping on to the mechanical ramp of the ride at Dreamworld on the Gold Coast, a key tourist attraction.
“Ardent accepts responsibility for this tragedy without qualification or reservation,” said the firm’s chairman, Gary Weiss, and its Theme Parks chief executive, John Osborne.
“We sincerely hope the finalisation of the prosecution will go some way towards furthering the healing process,” they said in a joint statement.
The fine followed a coroner’s finding this year that Ardent had ignored warnings and not done adequate safety checks, with the matter then referred to an industrial prosecutor that brought charges of workplace safety violations against the firm.
The fine ordered by the court was less than the maximum penalty of A$4.5 million prescribed for the charges, to which Ardent had previously pleaded guilty.
Ardent has already paid about A$5 million in more than 20 compensation lawsuits over the incident, media have said.
(Reporting by Byron Kaye; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)