It is New Year, and
crowds throng the Exhibition Road. Thrill seekers are here by the droves, you
can hear them yell from half a mile away, or so it seems. For Bhrikuti Mandap
is home to Kathmandu Fun Park, which contains several amusement rides meant for
both young and old. With the addition of an amusement and water park at Sanga,
it would seem that youngsters in Nepal do not have to pine for Disneyland anymore.
But though this nascent industry provides the thrills they desperately seek, it
is still struggling to ensure complete safety of its consumers.
Kausar Javed, a
teenager who often rides the Columbus and Ferris Wheel at Bhrikuti Mandap,
enjoys these rides a lot. But when you ask her about safety, she grimaces. “The
seat next to the last has its handles falling off,” says she. “But if you hang
on tight, you won’t fall,” she concludes gaily. Forget safety harnesses, rusted
handlebars are the norm, and it is not uncommon to find a few damaged bars like
the one Kausar pointed out. It is only the cheerful spirit of the consumers
that keeps these flaws from becoming lawsuits. It is also not unusual to find
riders flinging off the safety bar and hopping down before the ride completely
stops.
It is immediately
apparent that much more precautions are taken for rides for very young children.
For example, one of the rides at Bhrikuti Mandap is built like a cage –there is
no way anyone can fall and it moves very, very slowly. Another one called Teacup
has an operator constantly moving in and out of the ride to take care of
fidgety children. This too moves very slowly.
But some of the times,
the operators moving in and out of the ride are not taking care of the riders,
but performing minor repairs with hammers and mallets. “They are trained
mechanics,” says Nabin, ride operator at the Park. “First you get to be a
helper, then an operator, and only then a mechanic.” He himself got to touch a
machine only after working for six months as a helper.
But Nabin is a
temporary staff, hired only for the holiday season. There are many other temporary
operators hired for busy seasons who have no more knowledge of the machine than
the on/off switch. But they can be seen going underneath the rides and checking
and repairing flaws. Nabin may have got his knowledge from experience, but many
credit their knowledge of the machines to intuition. The officers at Kathmandu
Fun Park were unavailable for comments on its security aspects.
At Kathmandu Fun
Valley in Sanga, electrical supervisor Upendra Karki informed that while he was
specifically trained for the rides, all the operators are given weekly, monthly
and six-monthly trainings. They also have trained lifeguards to help at the
water section. The water sports there have been very popular, five-year-old
Arpit Upadhyaya enjoyed himself so much that he refused to leave the Park.
But on a more serious
note, though it has an experienced medical officer at hand for first aid, the
Park does not have insurance for its consumers.
“Since the Park is
fairly new, there have been no untoward incidents. Perhaps that is the reason
we have not thought of insurance, though we take security seriously,” says
Sudeshna KC, a human resources and admin staff at the Park.
Over at the Central
Zoo, Surya Bhakta Nakarmi has taken an insurance policy of Rs. 500,000 on his
personal initiative for his ride called Funny Temple. The lack of uniformity
regarding something as crucial as insurance results from the fact that there is
no central body governing the installment, management, and security of amusement
parks as a whole.
“As a business, they
need to take permission from whatever local body they fall under. But as for
the ride itself, the owners operate it at their own risk,” said Laxman Aryal,
CEO of Kathmandu Metropolitan City Office. The Park at Bhrikuti Mandap is governed
by the Social Welfare Council, the one at Sanga by Bhaktapur Municipality
Office, and Surya Bhakta has registered his workshop with the Department of
Cottage and Small Industries.
This means that the
rides operate with little or no government supervision. As businesses, they all
pay taxes. But other than that, there is no interest in or monitoring of the
rides from the government side. Like all fairs and carnivals, amusement parks
are also governed by the Local Self Government Act. But the Act only addresses
social factors like general security and peace, not specifically the technical
aspects of amusement rides. Faced with a vacuum of regulations, the owners are
the ones who decide crucial elements like safety, maintenance of the physical
structure, and appointment of able candidates.
“Internal rules govern
such issues,” confirms Sushil Chaudhari, chief of Bhrikuti Mandap Operation
Committee.
International
standards dictate that the speed of a ride, the height of the person who can
ride in it and other precautionary notices must be put up where the consumer can
see them. But no such signs are in evidence anywhere near the rides at Bhrikuti
Mandap, though there are notices suggesting that people with heart disease and
epilepsy refrain from riding. As for age and height of riders, Sajani Khadgi, ticket
seller, informs that they do not let children ride the Columbus—one of the more
dangerous rides. But without objective measures of who is a child and who is
not, this rule is informal and not strictly enforced.
Questions like whether
the structure can hold the specified number of people, whether it needs
updating, and whether the safety harness is sufficient for the kind of ride are
also decided only by the owners of the rides. As for the physical structure
itself, Nakarmi informs that he plans to continue operating Funny Temple at the
Zoo as long as it doesn’t fail him.
“This is Nepal, we
don’t change or update the structure just for cosmetic damages,” says he.
Machines of this size
require regular lubrication, maintenance, and checking for flaws. Since he is
the designer and technical officer of Funny Temple, Nakarmi takes care of these
tasks himself and can guarantee safety on the ride. But the same cannot be said
of structures which are at the hands of untrained or semi-trained operators. This
is especially true of temporary rides which are set up during carnivals and
dismantled soon after, and many of them are seen in derelict conditions.
Consumers who seek the adrenaline rush need to keep in mind that they do so at
their own risk.
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