The city's tourism board said all festivities, including the traditional High Mass at the centuries-old cathedral, were cancelled as the city went into mourning following the crash. "It was going so quickly. ... It seems that on a curve the train started to twist, and the wagons piled up one on top of the other," passenger Ricardo Montesco told Cadena Ser radio station. "A lot of people were squashed on the bottom. We tried to squeeze out of the bottom of the wagons to get out and we realised the train was burning. ... I was in the second wagon and there was fire. ... I saw corpses," he added. Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, who was born in Santiago de Compostela, will visit the site on Thursday morning, his spokeswoman said. "In the face of a tragedy such as just happened in Santiago de Compostela on the eve of its big day, I can only express my deepest sympathy as a Spaniard and a Galician," Rajoy said in a statement.
TRAVELLING TOO FAST?
Madrid sent forensic scientists and hospital staff to the region on special flights. The death toll was 77, a spokeswoman for Galicia's Supreme Court said on Thursday morning, adding that the figures were still provisional. She said that 73 three people had died at the site of the derailment and four died in hospital. Up to 131 people were injured, a Galicia-based spokeswoman for the office of the central government had earlier said. "The scene is shocking, it's Dante-esque," said the head of the surrounding Galicia region, Alberto Nunez Feijoo, in a radio interview. The eight-carriage train was travelling from Madrid to Ferrol on the Galician coast when it derailed, Renfe said in a statement. The disaster happened as Spain is struggling to emerge from a long-running recession marked by government-driven austerity to bring its finances into order.
Firefighters called off a strike to help with the disaster, while hospital staff, many operating on reduced salaries because of spending cuts, worked overtime to tend the injured. The city's main festival focuses on St James, one of Jesus' 12 disciples whose remains are said to rest there and who is patron saint of Galicia. The apostle's shrine there is the destination of the famous El Camino de Santiago pilgrimage, followed by Christians since the Middle Ages. The derailment happened less than two weeks after six people died when a train came off the tracks and hit the platform at a station in central France. That accident may have been caused by a loose steel plate at a junction, French train operator SNCF said. Wednesday's derailment was one of the worst rail accidents in Europe over the past 25 years. In November 2000, 155 people were killed when a fire in a tunnel engulfed a funicular train packed with skiers in Austria. In Montenegro, up to 46 people were killed and nearly 200 injured in 2006 when a packed train derailed and plunged into a ravine outside the capital, Podgorica. In Spain itself, 41 people were killed the same year when an underground train derailed and overturned in a tunnel just before entering the Jesus metro station in Valencia. (Reporting by Inmaculada Sanz, Sonya Dowsett, Sarah White, Andres Gonzalez, Blanca Rodriguez, Julien Toyer and Emma Pinedo; Writing by Sonya Dowsett; Editing by Julien Toyer, Peter Cooneya and John Stonestreet)
By: Reuters
http://reuters.com
No comments:
Post a Comment