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Comparative Rail Safety

Oil Train Derails and Catches Fire in Oregon
Justin Worland @justinworland June 3, 2016

View attachment 308708


Local schools were evacuated as the train caught fire

A crude oil train caught fire in Oregon on Friday after derailing near the Columbia River in the town of Mosier.

Local schools were evacuated and photos from the scene showed plume of smoke rising above the trees. A total of eight cars of the Union Pacific train filled with fuel had derailed and only had caught fire, a Oregon Department of Forestry spokesperson told KATU News. State officials said a portion of the interstate highway had been closed.

View attachment 308709

Energy companies have come to rely on the country’s railroad network to transport crude oil in response to the fracking boom of the last decade. The oil exploration method allows oil engineers to dig up oil in locations that would have been unthinkable just years ago, and oil trains are the most efficient way to get natural resources from the field to the refinery.

Activists say these trains pose a risk to the millions who live along the tracks where crude oil trains travel. Train tracks and tanker cars weren’t built to accommodate trains carrying loads of heavy crude oil, making the trains more likely to derail. The deadliest incident killed 47 people in the town of Lac-Mégantic, Quebec in 2013.

“History has repeatedly shown just how deadly and dangerous oil train crashes can be,” Sierra Club campaigner Lena Moffitt said Friday. “Simply put, transporting oil by rail—or by any method—is a disaster waiting to happen.”

Union Pacific did not immediately return a request for comment.
They really need invest some money into railway, not just costing millions for a single missile.
Americanos' bloody money is so wasted, still using some damn old infra.
 
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Damn, this one happened in Taiwan. Luckily, there were no casualties...
Don't just blame the weather, maybe the infrastructure needs improvement.


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Taiwan Passenger Train Derails, Seasonal Weather Blamed
2016-06-04 21:25:00 Xinhua Web Editor: Huang Shan

03b57f8115a046d5aef302a7e305ddd5.jpg

A passenger train derails in Taiwan on June 4, 2016. [Photo: 163.com]

A passenger train derailed at noon Saturday in eastern Taiwan, but no casualties have been reported, according to the railway authority.

The second to seventh cars of Train 651, which was bound for Changhua County from Taitung County, derailed in Hualien County at 12:34 p.m. and the 50 passengers in these cars were unhurt, said Taiwan's railway administration.

The derailment halted train service between two nearby stations. A replacement bus service was provided.

The derailed cars and a 250-meter stretch of tracks were badly damaged, it added.

As of 6 p.m., the accident had delayed 17 trains, disrupting the travel plans of 2,740 passengers, said the administration.

It said the accident was initially believed to be caused by track buckling due to high temperatures.

An investigation has been launched.

The railway service is expected to return to normal after repair work is finished early on Sunday.

Many parts of the island have experienced scorching weather this month. The temperature in Taitung was 38.4 degrees Celsius on Saturday, the highest this year.

The temperature in Taipei hit 38.7 degrees Celsius on Wednesday, the highest in June for the city since weather-data collection began 120 years ago.
 
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Damn, this one happened in Taiwan. Luckily, there were no casualties...
Don't just blame the weather, maybe the infrastructure needs improvement.


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Taiwan Passenger Train Derails, Seasonal Weather Blamed
2016-06-04 21:25:00 Xinhua Web Editor: Huang Shan

View attachment 308800
A passenger train derails in Taiwan on June 4, 2016. [Photo: 163.com]

A passenger train derailed at noon Saturday in eastern Taiwan, but no casualties have been reported, according to the railway authority.

The second to seventh cars of Train 651, which was bound for Changhua County from Taitung County, derailed in Hualien County at 12:34 p.m. and the 50 passengers in these cars were unhurt, said Taiwan's railway administration.

The derailment halted train service between two nearby stations. A replacement bus service was provided.

The derailed cars and a 250-meter stretch of tracks were badly damaged, it added.

As of 6 p.m., the accident had delayed 17 trains, disrupting the travel plans of 2,740 passengers, said the administration.

It said the accident was initially believed to be caused by track buckling due to high temperatures.

An investigation has been launched.

The railway service is expected to return to normal after repair work is finished early on Sunday.

Many parts of the island have experienced scorching weather this month. The temperature in Taitung was 38.4 degrees Celsius on Saturday, the highest this year.

The temperature in Taipei hit 38.7 degrees Celsius on Wednesday, the highest in June for the city since weather-data collection began 120 years ago.
Hualian County is notorious for weak infrastructure.
The incumbent DPP regime should spend more time on that instead of wasting time in in the revenge on KMT.
 
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A train accident, this time in Belgium...

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Belgium train crash: Three killed and nine injured after collision near Liege
John-Thor Dahlburg

Three people were killed and nine others injured, some of them critically, when a late-night train crashed into the rear of a stationary freight train in eastern Belgium, authorities said.

"The passenger train is really in a lamentable state," Francis Dejon, mayor of the commune of Saint-Georges-sur-Meuse, told a news conference. "We've very lucky there weren't more victims."

Twenty-seven other passengers were treated as a result of the accident, which authorities said happened at around 11pm on Sunday.

belgium-train-crash-epa.jpg


RTL broadcasting said the passenger train was carrying about 40 people when it slammed into the freight train at a speed of 55mph (90kph) in Hermalle-sous-Huy on the banks of the River Meuse near Liege.

Two cars from the passenger train derailed and overturned.

Mr Dejon said the first car was so badly damaged "it was curled back on itself".

It took rescuers up to three hours to free people from the wreckage.

Some of the nine injured people taken to hospital were in a critical condition and the death toll could rise, the mayor said.

He added that prosecutors were at the scene and were investigating the cause of the accident.

"The SNCB will participate closely in the investigation," Belgium's national railway operator said in a statement.

Its services have been seriously affected by a recent wave of strikes, especially in French-speaking parts of the country.

The train crash halted rail services between Namur and Liege, two of Belgium's largest cities. Nathalie Pierard, an SNCB spokeswoman, said it could take several days to clear the tracks.

The passenger train was travelling between Mouscron and Liers. Those injured were taken for treatment to Huy and Liege, and psychological counselling was arranged for those who wanted it.

Family members arriving at the accident scene to search for loved ones were being offered accommodation in a nearby abbey.

Associated Press
 
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A train accident, this time in Belgium...

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Belgium train crash: Three killed and nine injured after collision near Liege
John-Thor Dahlburg

Three people were killed and nine others injured, some of them critically, when a late-night train crashed into the rear of a stationary freight train in eastern Belgium, authorities said.

"The passenger train is really in a lamentable state," Francis Dejon, mayor of the commune of Saint-Georges-sur-Meuse, told a news conference. "We've very lucky there weren't more victims."

Twenty-seven other passengers were treated as a result of the accident, which authorities said happened at around 11pm on Sunday.

View attachment 309026

RTL broadcasting said the passenger train was carrying about 40 people when it slammed into the freight train at a speed of 55mph (90kph) in Hermalle-sous-Huy on the banks of the River Meuse near Liege.

Two cars from the passenger train derailed and overturned.

Mr Dejon said the first car was so badly damaged "it was curled back on itself".

It took rescuers up to three hours to free people from the wreckage.

Some of the nine injured people taken to hospital were in a critical condition and the death toll could rise, the mayor said.

He added that prosecutors were at the scene and were investigating the cause of the accident.

"The SNCB will participate closely in the investigation," Belgium's national railway operator said in a statement.

Its services have been seriously affected by a recent wave of strikes, especially in French-speaking parts of the country.

The train crash halted rail services between Namur and Liege, two of Belgium's largest cities. Nathalie Pierard, an SNCB spokeswoman, said it could take several days to clear the tracks.

The passenger train was travelling between Mouscron and Liers. Those injured were taken for treatment to Huy and Liege, and psychological counselling was arranged for those who wanted it.

Family members arriving at the accident scene to search for loved ones were being offered accommodation in a nearby abbey.

Associated Press
R.I.P
Good news it was just a regional train with a few cars.

The infrastructure in Europe has met some serious problems though the longest railway tunnel has just inaugurated after decades, when governments invest more money in handling border control and illegal migrants' replacement!
@Götterdämmerung
 
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17 Taiwan tourists injured in train-bus crash in Switzerland


In this May 20, 2016 picture provided by police in Bern, Switzerland a damaged train waits after it crashed into an Austrian bus at a railroad-crossing near Interlaken, Switzerland. Swiss police say at least 16 people were injured when a high-speed train crashed into a bus in Interlaken near Bern. Police said in a statement Saturday May 21, 2016 that the accident happened Friday night at a railway crossing.


In this picture taken May 20, 2016 and provided by Bern police a damaged Austrian bus stands on the road after it crashed with a train at a railroad-crossing near Interlaken, Switzerland. Swiss police say at least 16 people were injured when a high-speed train crashed into a bus in Interlaken near Bern. Police said in a statement Saturday May 21, 2016 that the accident happened Friday night at a railway crossing.


BERLIN (AP) — Seventeen tourists from Taiwan were injured when a German high-speed train collided with a tour bus in the Swiss lakeside town of Interlaken, Swiss police and a Taiwanese official said Saturday.

Police in the nearby Swiss capital of Bern said in a statement the accident happened Friday night at a railway crossing involving a bus registered in neighboring Austria. Police were investigating the cause of the accident.

Bern police spokesman Nicolas Kessler said none of the injured had sustained life-threatening injuries and most had already left a hospital. Taiwan's CNA news agency reported that 12 people sustained minor injuries and another five were in critical condition.

Train derails in Hualien, several passengers injured




Taipei, June 22 (CNA) A Taiwan Railways train derailed in Hualien County on Wednesday, resulting in injuries to several passengers, according to the Taiwan Railways Administration (TRA).

Three of the train's carriages derailed and one flipped over, said the TRA, which noted that an emergency response center for the accident has been set up.

The railway administration is in the process of trying to learn more about the accident, it said.

(By Wang Hsu-fen and Elizabeth Hsu)
 
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At least 5 killed in Amtrak crash in Colorado

DENVER, June 27 (UPI) -- Five people have died after a train crashed into a minivan on Sunday, authorities said.

The train collided into the right side of the van after the minivan failed to stop at the railroad crossing. The driver and four of the passengers were killed. The family was on their way to church when the collision happened, Colorado State Patrol said in a news release.





The crossing does not have gates or warning lights and is marked by just four crossbuck signs, according to authorities.
 
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To prevent crashes like these, the railway lines need to be segregated from roads.

One way is to use viaducts for high speed trains which makes a lot of sense.

However, to use viaducts for normal passenger and freight trains would be too expensive.
 
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At least 5 killed in Amtrak crash in Colorado

DENVER, June 27 (UPI) -- Five people have died after a train crashed into a minivan on Sunday, authorities said.

The train collided into the right side of the van after the minivan failed to stop at the railroad crossing. The driver and four of the passengers were killed. The family was on their way to church when the collision happened, Colorado State Patrol said in a news release.





The crossing does not have gates or warning lights and is marked by just four crossbuck signs, according to authorities.
Why don't they upgrade crossings to bridges or tunnels?

To prevent crashes like these, the railway lines need to be segregated from roads.

One way is to use viaducts for high speed trains which makes a lot of sense.

However, to use viaducts for normal passenger and freight trains would be too expensive.
Agree.
Considering their financial dilemma, it's understandable that they don't have money for their own infra since they have burnt most of their money in the immoral wars.
 
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. .
I just saw this bad news.

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Italy train crash: 'Twenty-three killed' near Bari in collision
7 hours ago

Twenty-three people have been killed and dozens hurt in a head-on collision involving two passenger trains in southern Italy, officials say.

The two trains were on a single-track line at the time of the crash, between the coastal towns of Bari and Barletta.

The emergency services have been trying to free passengers from the shattered carriages, near the town of Andria.

One of those pulled from the wreckage was a small child, who was airlifted to hospital.

The local authorities have appealed for blood donors to come forward.

_90367769_e91a7f50-36c4-4697-8863-aac8d8ea7ca6.jpg

Several carriages were completely destroyed in the collision on a single-track line near Andria

It was unclear what led to the collision, which happened in good weather at 11:30 local time (09:30 GMT) in the southern region of Puglia.

A local prosecutor in nearby Trani said it was too early to speculate on the cause, although human error was likely to have been a factor.

_90364130_italy_crash2.png


Italian reports said one of the trains had come from Andria, and the other from Corato, a short distance to the south-east. Both were travelling at high speed.

"Surely one of the two trains shouldn't have been there. And surely there was an error. We need to determine the cause of the error," Commander Giancarlo Conticchio from the railway police said.

'Worst scene of my life'

Both trains had four carriages and images from the fire service showed wreckage strewn across a large area. Some of the carriages were so badly damaged there was little left but debris.

Corato Mayor Massimo Mazzilli said the damage was so extensive it was as if a plane had crashed.

"I saw dead people, others who were begging for help, people crying. The worst scene of my life," one policeman told journalists.

_90363830_afa0bf57-6f79-44a3-b002-28545732d40a.jpg

Wreckage lay strewn around the olive grove beside the tracks

Rescuers set up a field hospital at the scene to help care for the large number of wounded passengers.

"The situation is dramatic," Antonio Nunziante, from the local civil defence, told Ansa news agency.

In total, about 200 were involved in the rescue operation, working in temperatures up to 40C (104F).

Prime Minister Matteo Renzi interrupted a trip to Milan and returned to Rome, after ordering an investigation into the crash.

"I want to express my condolences to the families and I have ordered, with no holding-back, [an inquiry] to find who is responsible," he said.

"I think we must have absolute clarity on this. We will not stop until we understand what happened."

Pope Francis has also sent condolences. In a telegram to the archbishop of Bari, Monsignor Fracnesco Cacucci, he said he was mourning those who died and praying for the injured to recover quickly.

Transport Minister Graziano Delrio was at the scene with ministry inspectors and local prosecutors to survey the wreckage.

The line, managed by Ferrotramviaria, is used by thousands of people daily on about 200 trains. Work is under way to make it a double-track line.

Apulia regional leader Mario Loizzo said he was "deeply shaken" by the crash.

Italy's FS state rail operator expressed its condolences to the dead and wounded.

Earlier this year, 11 people died on a single track in southern Germany when two trains collided head-on at Bad Aibling near the Austrian border. Investigators said a signal controller had mistakenly allowed both trains to use the line, disabling an automatic safety system.

Italy's deadly train accidents
June 2009: Freight train carrying liquefied petroleum gas derails in Viareggio, causing a large explosion. More than 30 people die

January 2005: A head-on collision between a passenger and a freight train near Crevalcore kills 17

July 2002: A passenger train derails in Rometta Messina, killing eight people

April 1978: Two trains collide near a ravine next to Murazze Vado. Some of the carriages fall into the gorge, killing 42

Sources: Ansa, Corriere della Sera
 
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I just saw this bad news.

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Italy train crash: 'Twenty-three killed' near Bari in collision
7 hours ago

Twenty-three people have been killed and dozens hurt in a head-on collision involving two passenger trains in southern Italy, officials say.

The two trains were on a single-track line at the time of the crash, between the coastal towns of Bari and Barletta.

The emergency services have been trying to free passengers from the shattered carriages, near the town of Andria.

One of those pulled from the wreckage was a small child, who was airlifted to hospital.

The local authorities have appealed for blood donors to come forward.

View attachment 317155
Several carriages were completely destroyed in the collision on a single-track line near Andria

It was unclear what led to the collision, which happened in good weather at 11:30 local time (09:30 GMT) in the southern region of Puglia.

A local prosecutor in nearby Trani said it was too early to speculate on the cause, although human error was likely to have been a factor.

View attachment 317156

Italian reports said one of the trains had come from Andria, and the other from Corato, a short distance to the south-east. Both were travelling at high speed.

"Surely one of the two trains shouldn't have been there. And surely there was an error. We need to determine the cause of the error," Commander Giancarlo Conticchio from the railway police said.

'Worst scene of my life'

Both trains had four carriages and images from the fire service showed wreckage strewn across a large area. Some of the carriages were so badly damaged there was little left but debris.

Corato Mayor Massimo Mazzilli said the damage was so extensive it was as if a plane had crashed.

"I saw dead people, others who were begging for help, people crying. The worst scene of my life," one policeman told journalists.

View attachment 317157
Wreckage lay strewn around the olive grove beside the tracks

Rescuers set up a field hospital at the scene to help care for the large number of wounded passengers.

"The situation is dramatic," Antonio Nunziante, from the local civil defence, told Ansa news agency.

In total, about 200 were involved in the rescue operation, working in temperatures up to 40C (104F).

Prime Minister Matteo Renzi interrupted a trip to Milan and returned to Rome, after ordering an investigation into the crash.

"I want to express my condolences to the families and I have ordered, with no holding-back, [an inquiry] to find who is responsible," he said.

"I think we must have absolute clarity on this. We will not stop until we understand what happened."

Pope Francis has also sent condolences. In a telegram to the archbishop of Bari, Monsignor Fracnesco Cacucci, he said he was mourning those who died and praying for the injured to recover quickly.

Transport Minister Graziano Delrio was at the scene with ministry inspectors and local prosecutors to survey the wreckage.

The line, managed by Ferrotramviaria, is used by thousands of people daily on about 200 trains. Work is under way to make it a double-track line.

Apulia regional leader Mario Loizzo said he was "deeply shaken" by the crash.

Italy's FS state rail operator expressed its condolences to the dead and wounded.

Earlier this year, 11 people died on a single track in southern Germany when two trains collided head-on at Bad Aibling near the Austrian border. Investigators said a signal controller had mistakenly allowed both trains to use the line, disabling an automatic safety system.

Italy's deadly train accidents
June 2009: Freight train carrying liquefied petroleum gas derails in Viareggio, causing a large explosion. More than 30 people die

January 2005: A head-on collision between a passenger and a freight train near Crevalcore kills 17

July 2002: A passenger train derails in Rometta Messina, killing eight people

April 1978: Two trains collide near a ravine next to Murazze Vado. Some of the carriages fall into the gorge, killing 42

Sources: Ansa, Corriere della Sera

That's an unfortunate one. Terrible :(

Single track lines are very risky, obviously. Anything may go wrong with not proper management.

**

Italy's head-on train collision leaves at least 25 dead, 50 injured
Source: Xinhua 2016-07-13 05:38:48


by Marzia De Giuli

ROME, July 12 (Xinhua) -- A dramatic head-on crash between two trains, one the most serious accidents in Italy in recent years, has left at least 25 victims and more than 50 injured, according to local press.

The accident happened at around 11:30 a.m. local time on Tuesday, when one train hit another going the other way on a single-track railway in a countryside area between the towns of Ruvo di Puglia and Corato in Puglia region.

Both trains had four carriages. The first aerial photograph from firefighters showed the twisted metal of the first two carriages on each train, with wreckage strewn across a large area.

"It was a frightful, unbelievable scene," one of the first police officers who rushed to the spot was quoted as saying by ANSA news agency. "I saw dead people, others asking for help, people crying. It was the most terrible scene in my life," he added.

The bodies of a mother and her daughter were found holding onto each other in the debris, according to ANSA sources.

"My daughter also was on that train, she was here on a holiday," a woman in tears told Rai state television. "Her cellphone has been disconnected for three hours. I do not know anything about her," she said.

"I was about to irrigate my field when I first heard a siren from the trains, but it was useless because immediately after there was the crash. I saw some girls shouting and crying, and other people coming out of the trains with parts of their body missing," said one of the first witnesses on the scene.

A six-year-old child was the first passenger rescued by firefighters who pulled him out of the debris. The child, named Samuele, was brought to hospital in helicopter and was not in life peril.

Rescue activities were in full swing until late in the evening, but the operations were very complicated because the crash happened in a remote rural area.

One of the drivers was reported dead in the impact, said sources from the private local company named Ferrotramviaria which runs the two trains. "One of the two trains was too far, and investigators will tell us which one," Massimo Nitti, the general manager of Ferrotramviaria, said.

Meanwhile, the local authorities appealed for blood donors to come forward urgently to help save the life of dozens of passengers hospitalized throughout the region.

"The entire region is participating in this drama with huge blood donation," Loreto Gesualdo, head of the school of medicine at the university of Bari, capital city of Puglia, said. Photographs published by local media showed dozens of students were on the queue at local hospitals to donate blood.

No immediate reason was given for the crash, which may have been triggered by a technical failure or by the error of one of the train drivers who may have not observed a stop sign, according to first speculations. Local experts said, however, that it was too early to find out the cause.

The estimated speed of the two trains was around 100 km/h, and works had been reportedly planned to add an extra line. Commuters, students and also international tourists in the current summer season use the line every day, but the number of passengers that were on the trains on Tuesday was also not immediately available.

"An investigation committee will seek clarification about this tragedy," Italian Transport and Infrastructure Minister Graziano Delrio told journalists after he rushed to the scene. "The collision was extremely violent," he added.

Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi left Milan in northern Italy, where he was about to inaugurate an exhibition, to reach the scene in the evening. President Sergio Mattarella defined the disaster as "unacceptable" and pledged to "immediately ascertain the responsibilities and possible lacks precisely."

According to consumers association Codacons, Tuesday's accident highlighted the "intolerable level of backwardness" of rail transport in less developed southern Italy. "Italy is continuing to invest in high speed rail, often leaving the railway system in the south behind," Codacons head Carlo Rienzi observed in a statement.

Over the past 15 years,four major train accidents occurred across the country and have caused a total of 56 victims, of which 32 died in 2009 when a freight train derailed in the town of Viareggio, in Tuscany region, and caused a large fire.
 
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That's an unfortunate one. Terrible :(

Single track lines are very risky, obviously. Anything may go wrong with not proper management.

**

Italy's head-on train collision leaves at least 25 dead, 50 injured
Source: Xinhua 2016-07-13 05:38:48


by Marzia De Giuli

ROME, July 12 (Xinhua) -- A dramatic head-on crash between two trains, one the most serious accidents in Italy in recent years, has left at least 25 victims and more than 50 injured, according to local press.

The accident happened at around 11:30 a.m. local time on Tuesday, when one train hit another going the other way on a single-track railway in a countryside area between the towns of Ruvo di Puglia and Corato in Puglia region.

Both trains had four carriages. The first aerial photograph from firefighters showed the twisted metal of the first two carriages on each train, with wreckage strewn across a large area.

"It was a frightful, unbelievable scene," one of the first police officers who rushed to the spot was quoted as saying by ANSA news agency. "I saw dead people, others asking for help, people crying. It was the most terrible scene in my life," he added.

The bodies of a mother and her daughter were found holding onto each other in the debris, according to ANSA sources.

"My daughter also was on that train, she was here on a holiday," a woman in tears told Rai state television. "Her cellphone has been disconnected for three hours. I do not know anything about her," she said.

"I was about to irrigate my field when I first heard a siren from the trains, but it was useless because immediately after there was the crash. I saw some girls shouting and crying, and other people coming out of the trains with parts of their body missing," said one of the first witnesses on the scene.

A six-year-old child was the first passenger rescued by firefighters who pulled him out of the debris. The child, named Samuele, was brought to hospital in helicopter and was not in life peril.

Rescue activities were in full swing until late in the evening, but the operations were very complicated because the crash happened in a remote rural area.

One of the drivers was reported dead in the impact, said sources from the private local company named Ferrotramviaria which runs the two trains. "One of the two trains was too far, and investigators will tell us which one," Massimo Nitti, the general manager of Ferrotramviaria, said.

Meanwhile, the local authorities appealed for blood donors to come forward urgently to help save the life of dozens of passengers hospitalized throughout the region.

"The entire region is participating in this drama with huge blood donation," Loreto Gesualdo, head of the school of medicine at the university of Bari, capital city of Puglia, said. Photographs published by local media showed dozens of students were on the queue at local hospitals to donate blood.

No immediate reason was given for the crash, which may have been triggered by a technical failure or by the error of one of the train drivers who may have not observed a stop sign, according to first speculations. Local experts said, however, that it was too early to find out the cause.

The estimated speed of the two trains was around 100 km/h, and works had been reportedly planned to add an extra line. Commuters, students and also international tourists in the current summer season use the line every day, but the number of passengers that were on the trains on Tuesday was also not immediately available.

"An investigation committee will seek clarification about this tragedy," Italian Transport and Infrastructure Minister Graziano Delrio told journalists after he rushed to the scene. "The collision was extremely violent," he added.

Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi left Milan in northern Italy, where he was about to inaugurate an exhibition, to reach the scene in the evening. President Sergio Mattarella defined the disaster as "unacceptable" and pledged to "immediately ascertain the responsibilities and possible lacks precisely."

According to consumers association Codacons, Tuesday's accident highlighted the "intolerable level of backwardness" of rail transport in less developed southern Italy. "Italy is continuing to invest in high speed rail, often leaving the railway system in the south behind," Codacons head Carlo Rienzi observed in a statement.

Over the past 15 years,four major train accidents occurred across the country and have caused a total of 56 victims, of which 32 died in 2009 when a freight train derailed in the town of Viareggio, in Tuscany region, and caused a large fire.
Sad news.
Europe must refocus on upgrading outdated infrastructure!
 
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I just saw this bad news from Spain. Having a train network is only one part of the story. It requires regular maintenance and upgrades.

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Four dead in Spain as train derails
Posted Sat 10-Sep-2016 at 5:52am


A train carrying tourists to Portugal from north-western Spain has veered off the tracks and smashed into a pillar, killing its Portuguese driver as well as a US passenger and two Spaniards.

Key points:
  • Routine maintenance work was being conducted in the area, Spain's railway company said
  • Locals said trains on this stretch of the tracks often passed at high speed
  • Forty-seven people were hurt — none suffered serious injury
The train, which was going to Porto in Portugal from Spain's Vigo, appeared to have hit the wall of a bridge as it was going underneath, prompting it to crash just before entering a station, according to the mayor of the nearby town of O Porrino.

Authorities in the Galicia region, where the accident took place, said the train conductor was one of the two Spaniards who died in the Friday morning accident, which also saw 47 people hurt.

Among the injured were other Spaniards, Americans and Portuguese as well as people from Argentina, Germany, Britain, Brazil, Uruguay and Chile — none of whom suffered serious injury.

'This isn't normal'

Locals gathered on Friday evening at the scene of the accident — where a carriage of the train still lay on its side, the front completely caved in and mangled — questioning why the crash happened on a good-visibility, straight line.

Adif, the company in charge of railway tracks in Spain, said that routine maintenance work was being conducted in the area.

This was confirmed by Rafael Catala, acting Public Works Minister, who said it meant "that trains are provisionally diverted to another track, forcing them to reduce their speed according to regulations".

But many locals on site told AFP that trains on this stretch of the tracks passed by at high speed.

Maria del Carmen Perez, who lives in front of the scene of the accident, said the trains that make the Vigo to Porto connection "go by so fast that the windows of my house almost tremble".

Like several others, Ramon Gonzalez, a man interviewed by Spanish television who works in the station cafeteria near the accident, pointed out that the tracks were in a straight line.

"The train was due to stop in 50 metres, so this isn't normal," he said.

Witnesses of the accident, meanwhile, spoke of a loud noise.

Political campaigning suspended, PM visits site

Alex Ramilo, a 15-year-old local resident who was biking over the bridge when the crash happened, told AFP he heard a "deafening noise".

"I looked and saw the train derailing," he said.

"I was speechless, in shock, I didn't really realise what had happened."

7832884-3x2-700x467.jpg

Emergency workers attend to the train, which derailed in O Porrino, northwestern Spain. (AFP/MIGUEL RIOPA)

Mr Ramilo went straight to the station, where he tried to help.

"There were loads of people … residents who wanted to help," he said.

"And as there were not enough emergency personnel, some people even helped them extract people from carriages."

As regional elections near in Galicia this month, several political parties including the ruling conservative Popular Party and the Socialists announced they had suspended their campaign, which had only just begun.

Meanwhile Acting Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, who is from Galicia, also travelled to the site of the accident.

AFP
 
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