At least six people have died and over a hundred were injured when a
packed French intercity train derailed and crashed at high speed into a
station outside Paris.
The French railway company SNCF said the
train travelling from Paris to Limoges was carrying 385 passengers when
it derailed at 5.15pm on Friday at Brétigny-sur-Orge in Essonne, 20km
south of Paris.
Four of the train's seven carriages ploughed into a
crowded platform at rush hour on one of the busiest days of the year
for holiday getaways.
Security services have been working on the
wreckage where passengers are believed to be trapped in mangled
carriages, which were lying on their side.
The French president
François Hollande, visiting the scene, said six people were killed and
22 were seriously injured, including one who was in a critical
condition. The prefect's office in Essonne said a total of 180 people
were injured. Hollande said three inquiries had been launched into what
caused the derailment.
Michael Lesaunier, the owner of a cafe
beside the busy suburban station told iTele: "The train approached very,
very fast, knocking out everything in its path. It was rush hour, the
platform was full."
He added that the passengers he had seen were very shocked and talking of serious injuries.
Boris
Berson, a passenger travelling in one of the carriages that did not
derail, said the passengers in his unaffected carriage were shaken and
"did not know what was going on".
El Mehdi Bazgua, 19, who saw the
derailment from the window of a different RERC local suburban train,
told Le Parisien website: "I heard a massive noise and saw a cloud of
sand that covered everything. I saw stones and wires on the ground. Then
the dust lifted … We saw the first injured. I saw a man with an open
head wound. Lots of people were cut. Lots of train passengers were
blocked under the train."
He had heard of very bad injuries and
said a lot of passengers on his train were crying. One of the wounded
passengers asked observers not to film the accident.
Several witnesses described the train as appearing to "split in two". One witness told Europe 1 radio of a scene of chaos and panic at the station where he said the derailed carriages were "crushed".
The
Socialist mayor of Brétigny, Bernard Decaux, told Le Parisien: "Three
carriages were tangled up one behind the other", with a fourth lying on
its side. He added: "I have no idea of the number of casualties, I've
just been told it risks being very heavy. There are people injured by
ballast."
He said "Everyone was running in all directions. It was panic. It was an apocalyptic sight."
At the scene, Guillaume Pepy, head of SNCF, in tears in front of the TV cameras, talked of a "rail catastrophe".
Hospitals
in Paris have been on emergency alert to treat serious injuries,
including from electrocution. As hundreds of emergency staff worked on
the wreckage, the cause of the derailment has not yet become fully
clear.
The train had left Paris-Austerlitz station at 4.53pm and
was scheduled to pass through Brétigny station at high speed without
stopping on its way to Limoges at 8.05pm. But carriages three and four
derailed and careered into the train platform, dragging others behind
them.
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