Mother whispered into her 10-year-old son’s ear before carrying him onto the…
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Mother whispered into her 10-year-old son’s ear before carrying him onto the tracks where they were hit by a train in front of commuters after she told her brother they were going to the dentist
- Mother and her son died after being seen getting on to the train tracks in 2016
- An inquest into their deaths has been opened by a coroner in Reading today
- Hearing told train driver saw the mother talking to the boy before the incident
A mother whispered into the ear of her son before climbing down and laying onto railway tracks where they hit by a train and killed, an inquest heard today.
Rubina Khan told her brother she was going to the dentist with her 10-year-old son, Amaar, before the pair shortly before the pair died on the tracks at Slough station in 2014.
The mother-of-three bought an adult and child train ticket to Windsor before walking to an empty platform where no trains were due to stop.
The 46-year-old was seen by train driver David Campbell-Kinder to bend down to talk to her son, who was in his school uniform, before climbing onto the tracks with him in her arms and laying down, Reading Coroner’s Court was told.
The pair were killed by a high speed train passing through the station.
Amaar’s backpack full of school books was later found by officers on a bench on the platform.
In a statement read to the Berkshire Coroner Peter Bedford, her brother Zahire Khan said he was surprised to see the pair on September 23, 2014, when he stopped and spoke to them around 30 minutes before they died.
He said: ‘I had never seen her in town before and it was a school day and Amaar was with her… but a nice unexpected surprise.
‘We stopped and had a brief chat. Amaar appeared to be happy and excited and I asked ‘what are you lot doing here?’
‘Rubina smiled and said she had an appointment with her dentist in London and Amaar had the day off. I just said ‘okay’ and then waved and said our goodbyes and walked off in opposite directions.
‘Looking back now there was nothing during our meeting that gave me concern and it was just a normal meeting between friends and family.’
Her husband of 22 years, Jahinger Khan, grew concerned about his wife and son when he returned to an empty home in
Slough, and then received a call from Amaar’s school that he had not shown up for lessons.
He drove to his mother-in-law’s house where he spoke to Zahire, who had told him he had seen them that morning.
They drove to train station that was by then the centre of a police investigation.
Zahire said: ‘I immediately thought something was not right and told Jahinger to stay in the car and I ran to the station to speak to an officer.
‘I explained my sister and nephew were missing and was asked to accompany him to a vehicle. The officer explained there had been an incident involving a lady and a child and then I feared the worst.
‘I started to panic and wanted to leave and I needed to get away.’
The inquest into the Mrs Khan and Amaar’s deaths, which is due to be heard over two days, continues.