PRAGUE, Aug 8: An express train crashed on Friday into a road bridge in the Czech Republic as it collapsed on to the tracks, killing at least seven people and injuring 70, rescue services said.

The locomotive and six passenger carriages came off the tracks and were left a mass of twisted metal. Emergency services arrived at the scene to find dead, injured, bags and train seats scattered everywhere.

“It’s horrible. It’s a disaster,” said police spokeswoman Miroslava Michalkova-Salkova.

Fire brigade spokesman Zdenek Nytra said that rescuers had pulled all surviving victims from the wreckage.

The train was travelling at about 135 kilometres an hour as it approached the metal bridge near Studenka in the northwest of the country, said Jan Kucera, a deputy director general of Czech railways.

The bridge, which was being built, fell on the train before it could stop, according to first accounts.

“The driver saw that the bridge was moving and was starting to fall,” Kucera told reporters.

“He immediately slammed on the emergency brakes and hid in the engine compartment of the locomotive. Six seconds later there was the shock — and it was still going at 120 kilometres an hour,” the official added.

“There’s a lot of damage,” he said. Teams of rescuers set about cutting victims free from the wreckage. The injured were taken to 10 hospitals in the region by helicopter and in ambulances.

The train had been going from the Polish city of Krakow to Prague and the Czech and Polish prime ministers Mirek Topolanek and Donald Tusk went immediately to the crash scene.

The dead were five women and one man, the injured included two French nationals and one man who spoke only English, CT public television reported.

There were about 400 people on the train at the time, including a large group heading for a rock concert by British heavy metal band Iron Maiden at a Prague football stadium on Friday night.

“Our carriage was full of young people and we were having fun, then there was the crash, chaos. People were dying, they had no legs and arms. I am alive, I have been born again,” one woman passenger told the CTK news agency.

The driver, who survived, told reporters, “There was nothing I could do.” ”I will never get on a train again,” he added, refusing to give his name.

Sixteen fire brigade units with 30 vehicles were sent to the scene, along with ambulances and helicopters.

It was the worst rail accident in the Czech Republic since June 1995 when 19 mainly young people were killed. —AFP

Opinion

Editorial

Solidarity with Palestine
Updated 29 Nov, 2024

Solidarity with Palestine

The wretched of the earth see in the Palestinian struggle against Israel a mirror of themselves.
Little relief for public
29 Nov, 2024

Little relief for public

INFLATION, the rate of increase in the prices of goods and services over a given period of time, has receded...
Right to education
29 Nov, 2024

Right to education

IT is troubling to learn that over 16,500 students of the University of Karachi (KU) have defaulted on fee payments...
A hasty retreat
Updated 28 Nov, 2024

A hasty retreat

Govt should not extend its campaign of violence against PTI and its leaders, thinking it now has the upper hand. Enough is enough.
Lebanon truce
28 Nov, 2024

Lebanon truce

WILL it hold? That is the question many in the Middle East and beyond will be asking after a 60-day ceasefire ...
MDR anomaly removed
28 Nov, 2024

MDR anomaly removed

THE State Bank’s decision to remove its minimum deposit rate requirement for conventional banks on deposits from...