PRE-DAWN NIGHTMARE
The accident occurred in Hejiacun village, about 500
meters east of the Wangcun Railway Station in Zhoucun District in the suburbs of
Zibo, about 70 kilometers east of the provincial capital, Jinan.
One passenger, surnamed Zhang, said the train from
Beijing was like a "roller coaster".
"It toppled 90 degrees to one side and then 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 their thermos flasks," said Zhang.
When Zhang escaped from the wrecked train, she saw
many villagers had voluntarily joined the rescue work, some smashing train
windows with farm tools to free trapped passengers. Others brought food and
water from home.
"I saw a girl trying to help her boyfriend out of the
train -- only to find he was dead," Zhang said.
Zhang and other survivors also joined the rescue
work, using blankets and sheets from the sleeper cars as stretchers to carry out
the seriously injured.
"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 a fourth-year college student surnamed Xu, who was traveling from
Beijing to Qingdao to visit her boyfriend. She was not injured in the accident.
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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>>> |
Wang Xiaoyu, 23, from the northeastern Heilongjiang
Province and his girlfriend were also among the lucky passengers on board T195.
They were on the seventh carriage, far enough from the 10th to 18th carriages
that derailed.
"We were still asleep but felt the train jump twice.
Then the whole carriage had a power failure," said Wang. "Within 20 minutes, a
stewardess came and told us to join the rescue work."
Wang and several other young men walked about 500
meters to the derailed cars. "I pulled seven or eight people out of the wrecked
train -- some of them were already dead."
Wang and more than 30 other survivors took a bus to
Qingdao at 4:30 p.m.
Xu Dongtan, a physician with Zibo Central Hospital,
said he arrived at the site at 6 a.m. "I examined at least 110 patients to
decide which hospital they were to go to. Most people suffered bruises and
fractures," he said.
Patients were sent to 19 hospitals in or near Zibo. The city government has sent a 1,500-member team to help and console victims' families. Nine hotels and 34 rescue centers have been reserved for the victims' families.
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