|
TOKYO, April 26 (Xinhuanet) -- The train derailed
early Monday wasrunning over 100 kilometers per hour, much faster than the 70
kph upper limit, according to Japanese media reports on Tuesday.
The finding boosted speculation that speeding was to blame for the bloody accident. The initial report said the
derailment might result from a collision with a car at the crossing.
Investigators also are looking into marks on the
track, suspecting that the train might run over stones possibly placed bysomeone
on the rail.
The accident has killed 76 people and left more than
450 injured. Rescuers believe that there are still 10 to 20 people trapped into
the first two carriages about 36 hours after the derailment.
The seven-car train with about 580 people aboard
rammed into anapartment building nearby after the derailment in Amagasaki,
HyogoPrefecture. The two front cars were badly damaged, making it greatdifficult
for rescue workers to reach the remaining passengers.
Local police determined the train's speed after
having found its speed recording device, the reports said.
Many survivors also said in TV reports that they felt
the trainwas running unusually fast.
The train was one and half minutes behind schedule
when it started at the last station. The 23-year-old driver missed the proper
stop position by 40 meters and had to back up, the West Japan Railway Co. said
on Tuesday. The company said that the conductor of the train conspired with the
driver to report to the command center that the overrun was only eight meters.
The train theoretically would derail if its speed
exceeded 130 kph but it was designed to have a top speed of 120 kph.
The death toll made itself the most serious in Japan
since May 14, 1991, when 42 were killed and 527 injured in a collision of two
trains in west Japan. Enditem
|