 |
|
Photo taken on April 28, 2008, shows the
site of the trains colliding accident, in east China's Shandong Province.
Passenger train T195 en route from Beijing to Qingdao city in eastern
China derailed and hit train 5034 early on Monday, causing "heavy
casualties", witnesses and a government spokesman confirmed.(Xinhua
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
JINAN, April 28 (Xinhua) -- The death toll has
climbed to 66 and 247 were hospitalized after an early Monday train collision in
east China's Shandong Province, railway authorities confirmed.
Ministry of Railways said 51 of the injured
passengers were in critical condition.
Among the injured passengers were four French
nationals, all of whom have been hospitalized with bone fractures, a spokesman
with the provincial foreign affairs office said.
Their identities were not known.
The casualties were from two passengers trains, one
of which was en route from Beijing to Qingdao, a famous summer resort in
Shandong and venue of the Olympic sailing competition, and the other, from
Shandong's Yantai to Xuzhou in eastern Jiangsu Province.
The train from Beijing, coded T195, derailed in the
city of Zibo in Shandong Province at around 4:40 a.m. About 10 carriages toppled
into a ditch.
The derailed train hit train 5034 and caused the
latter to veer off its tracks, too.
 |
|
Vice Premier Zhang Dejiang (Front, R2)
conducts the rescue work at the site of the trains colliding accident, in
Zibo, east China's Shandong Province, on April 28, 2008. Passenger train
T195 en route from Beijing to Qingdao city in eastern China derailed and
hit train 5034 early on Monday. The death toll has climbed to 66 and 247
were hospitalized, railway authorities confirmed. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
PRE-DAWN CHAOS
The accident occurred in Hejiacun village, sandwiched
between Zhoucun district and Wangcun railway station in the suburbs of Zibo, and
about 70 kilometers east of the provincial capital Jinan.
"Most passengers were still asleep, but some were
standing in the aisle waiting to get off at the Zibo Railway Station," said one
passenger surnamed Zhang aboard the train from Beijing.
"I suddenly felt the train, like a roller coaster,
toppled 90 degrees to one side and all the way to the other side. When it
finally went off the tracks, many people fell on me and hot water poured out of
the thermos flasks."
Zhang was wounded in the head. When she climbed out
of the train window, she saw the train had toppled into the farmland beside the
railway.
Many villagers voluntarily joined the rescue work,
some smashing train windows with their farm tools to pull out the stranded
passengers, while others brought food and water from home.
"I saw a girl who was trying to help her boyfriend
out of the train, but he was dead," Zhang said.
Xu, a Beijing college student who was traveling to
Qingdao, escaped from the wrecked train safe and sound. "I got a hard seat. No
one was seriously injured in our carriage."
Many survivors also joined the rescue operation,
using blankets and bed sheets from the sleeper cars as stretchers to carry out
the seriously wounded.
"For a time, so many people were trying to make phone
calls that the mobile communications network was congested and no one could get
through," said Xu.
The city government of Zibo has sent a 1,500-member
strong team to help and console the victims' families. Nine hotels and 34 rescue
centers have been reserved for the victims' families.
Many passengers climbed out of the wrecked train cars
shortly after the accident. Some wrapped themselves in bed sheets from the
sleeper cars in the early morning chill.
Xinhua reporters at the site saw blood-tainted sheets
and broken thermos flasks on the ground, and some of the derailed train cars
were seriously damaged.
A 38-year-old woman from the provincial capital Jinan
escaped from the wrecked train through a huge crack in its floor with her
13-year-old daughter.
"We were still sleeping when the accident occurred,"
she said. "I suddenly woke up when I felt the train stopped with a jolt. In a
minute or two it started again, but soon toppled."
The woman, who gave only her family name of Yu, said
she was traveling with her daughter from Yantai to Jinan on board train 5034.
After the accident they were given bread and water and were waiting for
treatment.
The mother said she suffered pains on her legs, but
the child seemed largely unscathed.
Rescue teams, consisting of medical workers and
policemen, have been sent from the neighboring cities of Jinan and Weifang, said
a spokesman with the Shandong provincial government.
 |
|
Vice Premier Zhang Dejiang (R1) comforts
the injured passenger of the trains colliding accident, in a hospital of
Zibo, east China's Shandong Province, on April 28, 2008. Passenger train
T195 en route from Beijing to Qingdao city in eastern China derailed and
hit train 5034 early on Monday. The death toll has climbed to 66 and 247
were hospitalized, railway authorities confirmed. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
MINISTRY VOICES CONDOLENCE
A spokesman with the Ministry of Railways has voiced
condolences to the victims.
"We grieve over the losses of lives, and sincerely
hope those who were injured in the accident will recover soon," said Wang
Yongping.
The accident has caught the attention of top Chinese
leaders including President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao.
Vice Premier Zhang Dejiang, Minister of Railways Liu
Zhijun and head of the State Administration of Work Safety Wang Jun have arrived
at the site to oversee the rescue work.
TRAFFIC DISRUPTION
The accident has disrupted two-way traffic on the
Jinan-Qingdao Railway, a 384-km pivotal rail link between the two big cities in
Shandong.
This is the second major railway accident taking
place in Shandong this year.
In January, a high-speed train from Beijing to
Qingdao ran down a group of railway workers, leaving 18 dead and nine others
injured.
The workers were relocating the tracks when the train
ran into the work site in Anqiu City.
China had raised train speeds six times as of April
2007, with railways allowing a speed of more than 200 km per hour totaling 6,227
km in length. By 2020, the total length of such high-speed railways will reach
18,000 km and high-speed train services will cover 50,000 km, benefiting 90
percent of China's population.
The nation has started building several new
high-speed rail projects, including the new Beijing-Tianjin railway and the
Beijing-Shanghai railway. The latter, with a designed speed of 350kilometers per
hour, started construction in mid April.
East China train collision caused by
human error
ZHOUCUN, Shandong, April 28 (Xinhua) -- The train
collision in east China's Shandong Province that killed 66 people and injured
another 247 was caused by human error, according to preliminary investigation on
Monday.
Authorities have ruled out the possibility of terrorist
acts.Full story
China sacks railway officials shortly
after deadly train collision
JINAN, April 28 (Xinhua) -- Two high-ranking railway
officials were sacked on Monday following a deadly train collision which has
claimed 66 lives and injured hundreds in east China's Shandong province.
Chen Gong, former director, and Chai Tiemin, former Party
secretary of of the Jinan Railway Bureau were sacked and subject to
investigation by the Ministry of Railways, Xinhua learnt from the rescue
headquarters. Full story
Terrorist acts ruled out in E China
train collision
JINAN, April 28 (Xinhua) -- Chinese authorities said
preliminary investigations have ruled out the possibility of terrorist acts in
earlier Monday morning's passenger train collision in Shandong Province. Full story
No report of foreigners' death in E
China train collision
JINAN, April 28 (Xinhua) -- Four French nationals were
injured and but no foreigners are among the death toll in early Monday morning's
train collision in eastern Shandong Province, Chinese authorities said. Full story
Ministry of Railways: Disrupted
railway transportation to restore early on Tuesday
JINAN, April 28 (Xinhua) -- China's Ministry of Railways
sources said on Monday that they will work to restore the collision-disrupted
Jinan-Qingdao rail transportation at around 8:00 o'clock on Tuesday.
Workers at the scene of the accident are using cranes to
remove the wrecked carriages. Full story
Two trains collide in east China, causing heavy
casualties
BEIJING, April 28 (Xinhua) -- A passenger train en
route from Beijing to Qingdao city in eastern China derailed and hit another
train early on Monday, causing "heavy casualties", witnesses and a government
spokesman confirmed.
Passenger train T195, en route from Beijing to the
famous summer resort Qingdao, derailed in the city of Zibo in Shandong Province
at 4:43 a.m. About 10 carriages toppled into a ditch, a witness told Xinhua on
condition of anonymity. Full Story
[1] [2] [3] [4]