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Cyclist who died after crash in Richmond Park named

Dr Sian Tiong Lim from Surrey worked in pharmaceuticals development – and was one-time orchid smuggler

 

The cyclist who died after he crashed on a descent in Richmond Park, south west London, last month has been named as 40-year-old Dr Sian Tiong Lim who lived in Oxshott, Surrey.

He died at the Royal London Hospital after being taken there by air ambulance following the incident on Sunday 24 August.

Dr Lim, originally from Malaysia, obtained his Ph D from King’s College London in 2000, and worked in Guildford for pharmaceuticals business MedPharm, where he was vice-president of development.

According to the London Evening Standard, Dr Lim and his wife Evelyn had two children, a four-year-old daughter named Caelyn and an infant son Elijah, who was born in June this year.

The newspaper adds that Dr Lim was jailed for four months in 2006 after customs officials at London’s Heathrow Airport found more than 100 rare orchids in his luggage on his return from Malaysia, including two that an expert at the Royal Botanical Gardens in Kew had never come across before.

Dr Lim claimed that he was trying to protect the orchids by taking them away from Malaysia’s hot climate. The Telegraph reported at the time that the worldwide trade in smuggling orchids was worth £6 billion a year.

A friend of his told the Standard:  “The incident in 2006 was a mistake and it nearly destroyed Sian’s whole life. He didn’t deserve that. He was helping someone and it went wrong and he took responsibility for it. That was the kind of man he was.

“When he was in prison he helped teach inmates how to write letters back to their family. He was let out of prison early because of his good behaviour.

“He was so smart and always wanted to be the best, whether it was his work or his orchids or, after he was released from prison, bonsai trees.”

Dr Lim’s friend went on: “He was also an experienced cyclist and would cycle to work two or three times a week. He was traveling way below the speed limit when the accident happened. I was shocked and devastated.

“His life was dedicated to his work, bonsai trees and his family.

“He was also a very good father and his daughter was his sweetheart. He even had her picture on his phone.

“It was very sad. His wife is still struggling to cope.”

It is believed that Dr Lim crashed due to losing control on his bike on gravel on the surface of the road as he negotiated a bend.

Last week, another cyclist who rides in the Royal Park, Rene Taylor, spoke of his “guilt” after he experienced a similar crash at the same location but did not notify the authorities of the state of the road surface.

Richmond Cycling Campaign’s Tim Lennon said: “We do regularly hear about incidents in Richmond Park, whether involving cars, bicycles, or pedestrians, and we're keen to work with the Royal Parks to understand the circumstances, and whether this has lessons to be learned for how we all use the park and its facilities..

"In particular, it may be that the Royal Parks need to look at the state of the road surface at the edge, where more cyclists tend to be," he added.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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10 comments

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Veloacciaio | 9 years ago
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Still very sad when families are left behind.

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levermonkey | 9 years ago
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The original story on 26 August was all we needed to know -"Man dies after 15mph crash in Richmond Park" - Everything after that is just plain voyeurism.

The people who worked with him, his friends and family know who he is and will grieve for him. We DO NOT need to know his name or any private details about his life. We have NO emotional investment in this person.

He was a human being, neither saint nor sinner. Yes he committed a crime but he also paid for that crime. Every Sinner has a future; every Saint a past.

Our interest as cyclists should start and end with the facts surrounding this tragic accident. This DOES NOT preclude us from extending our sympathies however.

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freespirit1 | 9 years ago
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Perhaps road.cc should have copied this instead. They managed to avoid mentioning it!

http://www.getsurrey.co.uk/news/surrey-news/oxshott-scientist-sian-lim-d...

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Dnnnnnn | 9 years ago
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Agree with Chris and Binky - most of this story is cheap and irrelevant. Have some thought for his family, please.

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KirinChris | 9 years ago
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Agreed. Totally irrelevant.

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Zee replied to KirinChris | 9 years ago
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abudhabiChris wrote:

Agreed. Totally irrelevant.

I disagree, it was a significant part of his life and showed the strength of his character in the aftermath. I feel as though I understand him better as a person with that information.

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Binky replied to Zee | 9 years ago
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Zee wrote:
abudhabiChris wrote:

Agreed. Totally irrelevant.

I disagree, it was a significant part of his life and showed the strength of his character in the aftermath. I feel as though I understand him better as a person with that information.

How!?

You never met him! You never knew he existed until he died.
How does this story with a miniscule part of his life help you.
He could have done countless things before and after the smuggling, they could have been good or bad things, but you do not know that.

This is just tosh that the media grabs at in order to sell. It is as bad as the Telegraph headline 'Mother of three poised to lead the BBC'

Can you not see how totally irrelevant the story is?

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DarrenG replied to Zee | 9 years ago
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Zee wrote:
abudhabiChris wrote:

Agreed. Totally irrelevant.

I disagree, it was a significant part of his life and showed the strength of his character in the aftermath. I feel as though I understand him better as a person with that information.

Professional Griever alert. I bet you 'felt you knew Diana' when she died too!

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Binky | 9 years ago
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The guy is dead. Is there any need to say he was a smuggler?
It was flowers for crying out loud! How is this relevant?

Rather tragic that 'Road CC' needs to cut and paste this! Even the Huffington post makes a better effort when repeating trash from papers

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truffy replied to Binky | 9 years ago
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Binky wrote:

It was flowers for crying out loud!

Illegal trade in exotic species is illegal, whether it's flora or fauna is irrelevant.

But I also fail to see the relevance to the story as a whole.

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