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Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2025 5:10 am
by asimj1
Insight: After an accident, the media should always stick to proven facts and sometimes wait until important facts have been clarified or confirmed. Facts can of course be described and portrayed. It is understandable that online editors can hardly filter the flood of comments under time pressure. In the case of crises, disasters and accidents, however, the following applies: no assumptions, no hypotheses, no speculation about who is to blame or the causes of the accident.

The fact that accurate information takes time singapore rcs data was shown by the train collision in Neuhausen, which left people injured. All pseudo-experts who think they can read tea leaves in such situations should go over their books this evening. Ten hours after the accident, the cause of the collision was still not officially announced on the news. Basically, the findings mentioned are banal and nothing new. But they confirm that only those who have trained in crisis communication management can implement the tools from the textbooks in the hectic pace of events. One positive thing about the most recent train accident was that the official spokespeople I heard (SBB, police) did their job quite well.