GRANGES-PRES-MARNAND: Two trains collided head-on Monday in western Switzerland, killing one of the drivers and injuring 35 passengers, at least five of them seriously, police said.The accident...
By
AFP
|
July 30, 2013
GRANGES-PRES-MARNAND: Two trains collided head-on Monday in western Switzerland, killing one of the drivers and injuring 35 passengers, at least five of them seriously, police said.
The accident happened in Granges-pres-Marnand shortly before 7:00 pm (1700 GMT), according to regional police.
A reporter who arrived at the scene saw the wreckage of the train near the small station on the edge of the village of some 1,200 people.
The force of the impact was clear from the mangled engines of the trains, which were wrapped together.
One train had been bound for Lausanne, some 38 kilometres (24 miles) to the south, while the other was travelling north from the same city, officials said.
A total of 46 passengers had been on board, all of them Swiss, police said.
Frantic efforts continued into early Tuesday to free one of the drivers, with whom there had been no contact since the crash.
But by 1:30 am (2330 GMT) they had managed to extract his body from the cockpit of his train, using special equipment to cut through the wreckage.
Rescue teams deployed a heavy-lifting crane to remove the rest of the wreckage and clear the line, working under arc-lights set up to enable the operations to continue through the night.
Monday's collision on what is one of the most popular and safest rail networks in Europe was the latest in a series of rail accidents on the continent.
It comes in the wake of Wednesday's tragedy in the Spanish city of Santiago de Compostela which killed 79; and a crash near Paris two weeks ago that claimed seven lives.