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Alifia Soeryo death: Heartbreaking new blow for grieving mum after Indonesian student was crushed to death by a tree at University of Adelaide

4 months ago 34

By Pranav Harish For Daily Mail Australia

Published: 16:55 BST, 3 July 2024 | Updated: 16:55 BST, 3 July 2024

A grieving mother has been barred from seeing the findings from the investigations into the death of her daughter after she was crushed by a fallen tree.

Alifia Soeryo, 22 was jogging around the University of Adelaide's soccer grounds when part of an eight tonne gum tree collapsed on February 5. 

The Indonesian student had stopped to catch her breath when the tree fell on top of her. 

She could not be saved, despite the best efforts of paramedics who rushed to the scene. 

Five months on, Novie Badilla claims that she has been denied access to the findings from a SafeWork SA investigation into her daughter's death. 

Officials from the agency found that the Adelaide Council, which looks after the public space, was not responsible for Ms Soeryo's death.

SafeWork ruled in a report that no workplace laws were broken and deemed the incident a 'tragic accident'.  

Ms Badilla, 56, has been left devastated over the findings and is seeking legal advice in a bid to claim compensation from the council. 

Alifia Soeryo, 22 (pictured) died when part of a gum tree collapsed after she stopped to catch her breath while jogging around the University of Adelaide's soccer ground 

'I just want to know what happened, I just want people to be aware about this,' Ms Badilla  told the Adelaide Advertiser

'People tell me that gum trees fall, but this was not just the branches, it was the whole tree.'

Ms Badilla, who resides in Jakarta, claims she was informed by officials from SafeWork that access to the report could not be given due to legal restrictions.  

She claimed that officials told her she would need to file a freedom of information request if she wanted to access the report. 

The request, however, could take more than a month to process and information from the report could be redacted. 

Ms Badilla believed that she has a right to see the full report and the findings as the victim's mother. 

'The compensation is number two for me, but number one is justice,' she said. 

The report has been submitted to the coroner.

Ms Badilla has been told it would take anywhere from six to 18 months until they release their findings about what happened. 

A SafeWork SA spokesman said privacy regulations prevents the agency from revealing information contained in the report. 

'Due to confidentiality provisions, we are unable to provide further details of the investigation at this time,' the spokesman said. 

Adelaide Council is also understood to have conducted their own independent investigation.

SafeWork SA found that the Adelaide City Council, who look after the public space, was not responsible for the death of Ms Soeryo (pictured)

The mother of the international student said she wants to know what happened on the day her daughter died in the accident (pictured)

The council conducted inspections of the Adelaide parklands in June 2023, but no structural issues were detected.  

Ms Soeryo, who arrived in Adelaide to study a year ago, was completing her degree in communications at the university. 

She wanted to work in the transport sector. 

She was also a keen road cyclist and often shared videos of herself riding with friends on country roads on the outskirts of Adelaide. 

Ms Badilla accepted her daughter's degree at a graduation ceremony that was held at the university in May. 

Daily Mail Australia contacted SafeWork SA and Adelaide Council for further comment. 

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