In this Tuesday, Oct. 26, 2010 file photo, the first bullet train of a new high-speed railway linking Shanghai with Hangzhou travels to Hangzhou in Shanghai, China. Shanghai-Hangzhou high-speed railway start the operation Tuesday. The investigation into a bullet train crash in China last summer that killed 40 people has come and gone with scarcely any fresh information about what led to the disaster. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko, file)
In this Tuesday, Oct. 26, 2010 file photo, the first bullet train of a new high-speed railway linking Shanghai with Hangzhou travels to Hangzhou in Shanghai, China. Shanghai-Hangzhou high-speed railway start the operation Tuesday. The investigation into a bullet train crash in China last summer that killed 40 people has come and gone with scarcely any fresh information about what led to the disaster. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko, file)
In this Monday, June 27, 2011 file photo, a CRH high-speed train leaves the Beijing South Station for Shanghai during a test run on the Beijing-Shanghai high-speed railway in Beijing, China. China's bullet train builders have conducted a test run of their showcase Beijing-to-Shanghai line amid controversy over the system's high cost. The investigation into a bullet train crash in China last summer that killed 40 people has come and gone with scarcely any fresh information about what led to the disaster. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan, file)
FILE - In this Friday, July 29, 2011 file photo, relatives of victims of a high speed train crash burn incense and papers near a wall scribbled with poetry commemorating the accident at the crash site in Wenzhou, southeastern China's Zhejiang province. The investigation into a bullet train crash in China last summer that killed 40 people has come and gone with scarcely any fresh information about what led to the disaster. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, file)
SHANGHAI (AP) ? The investigation into a bullet train crash in China last summer that killed 40 people has come and gone with scarcely any fresh information released about what led to the disaster.
The secrecy surrounding the investigator's report, originally due in September and reportedly extended until late November, is typical of the sensitivities shown toward wider troubles plaguing the showcase high-speed rail program.
The accident inflamed public criticism over whether the powerful Railway Ministry was sacrificing safety in its costly quest to quickly roll out the bullet train network. Shortly after the July 23 crash, Premier Wen Jiabao called for a sweeping and transparent investigation,
Regulations on major transport accidents called for a report on the accident by Nov. 20, according to state media reports. Railway Ministry officials refused comment Tuesday.
The few slivers of information about the probe have been quickly recanted.
A railway expert and deputy director of the investigation team, Wang Mengshu, backtracked from comments published Monday in the state-run Beijing Times newspaper that quoted him as saying the accident near the eastern city of Wenzhou largely resulted from mismanagement.
State media on Tuesday carried reports of Wang claiming he was misquoted, that his comments were only his personal opinion, and that he was not authorized to speak to the media.
"I was not involved in the whole investigation. I did not have a general idea of the whole thing, and I did not know whether the conclusion had been submitted," Wang told state-run CCTV.
Wang did not respond to calls and e-mailed requests for comment.
In comments posted on the government work safety administration's website, Wang promised full and accurate disclosure of its findings.
The lack of transparency has left some in China skeptical that problems with the high speed rail network are being resolved, said Li Hongchang, an economics professor at Beijing Jiaotong University.
"People want not just the report but to understand how it was compiled. Openness and credibility are actually more important than the report itself," Li said.
Shortly after the accident, authorities blamed problems with the high-tech signaling systems used to run and route the trains for the crash, which occurred after railway staff failed to notice anything amiss when a lightening strike stalled a train and the signaling system failed to turn red.
But they have since backed away from that finding. The Beijing Times report quoted Wang as saying that given the lack of problems with the same signaling systems on other lines, the crash occurred mainly because of human error.
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