Tuesday 9 February 2016

Eight dead, 150 hurt in train crash in Germany

BAD AIBLING, Germany: Eight people were killed when two trains collided head-on in southeast Germany on Tuesday, police said. About 150 people were injured, including 50 seriously.
The collision took place on a single track and both trains derailed, said a police spokesman.
The cause was unclear and police said that, alongside the rescue effort, investigations were starting into establishing what had happened.
The crash between two local passenger trains happened at 6:48 a.m. local time (0548 GMT) near Bad Aibling in the southern state of Bavaria near the border with Austria.
Dozens of rescue teams were on site and helicopters carried some of the injured people to nearby hospitals. The area was sealed off.
The trains’ operator, Meridian, is part of French passenger transport firm Transdev, which is jointly owned by state-owned bank CDC and water and waste firm Veolia.
It runs train, tram and bus networks in 19 countries and had revenues of 6.6 billion euros in 2014.
State-owned Deutsche Bahn is responsible for the track. The line has a system that makes a train brake automatically if it goes through a red light.

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