China Daily (Hong Kong)

Authoritie­s seek answers after train derails in Taiwan

Two women from Chinese mainland hurt; passengers felt intense shaking on trip

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The cause of a deadly passenger train derailment on Sunday afternoon in northeaste­rn Taiwan was under investigat­ion by transporta­tion authoritie­s on Monday.

At least 18 people were confirmed dead and 187 were injured.

Two female passengers from the Chinese mainland were among the injured, the railway authority said.

All eight cars of the express train derailed, and three of them overturned.

The train, Puyuma Express No 6432, was bound for Taitung from Shulin Station, with 366 passengers aboard. It came off the tracks at 4:50 pm at Xinma Station in Yilan county.

Of those who died, the youngest was 9. Two students, aged 12 and 13, from a junior high school in Taitung were also killed.

One of the two passengers from the mainland, surnamed Yao, 44, was in critical condition. The other, surnamed Tan, 55, was slightly injured and was discharged from the hospital.

Mainland authoritie­s mourned those who died in the derailment and sent condolence­s to their families, as well as to the injured.

The mainland has paid close attention to the accident, according to officials from the State Council’s Taiwan Affairs Office and the Associatio­n for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits.

Passengers who survived the crash said the train had been shaking intensely during the journey and was going “very fast” before it derailed.

“The train stopped twice and we were told that there were problems that needed repair but the train restarted not long after,” one passenger, who identified herself as Mrs Chiu, told reporters.

“We felt that the speed was too fast, then there was a crashing sound and we flew off our seats,” she said, adding that many passengers were sleeping at the time.

An official from the Taiwan Railways Administra­tion said the train driver had reported a pressure device used for braking had malfunctio­ned 30 minutes before the accident, but that should not have caused the train to go too fast.

The crash, the worst in the Taiwan railway system in more than three decades, happened on a popular line along the island’s east coast. Services partially resumed on Monday morning.

The Puyuma Express was launched in 2013 to handle the rugged topography of Taiwan’s east coast. It is distinct from the high-speed railway that runs along the west coast.

The Puyuma trains travel up to 150 kilometers per hour, faster than any other trains in Taiwan except for the high-speed railways.

The Taiwan Railways Administra­tion bought the Puyuma from Japan’s Nippon Sharyo in 2011 in a 30 billion yen ($260 million) deal.

The train that derailed had its most recent inspection and major maintenanc­e work in 2017, Taiwan Railways Administra­tion Director Lu Chie-shen said in a televised news conference.

It was at least the third deadly train crash in Taiwan since 2003.

A tourist train overturned in the southern mountains in 2011 after a tree fell onto the tracks. Five passengers from the mainland were killed.

In another incident, a train on a test run ignored a stop sign and crashed into another in northeaste­rn Taiwan in 2007. Five people were killed.

And in 2003, a train derailed near a mountain resort, killing 17 people. Investigat­ors blamed brake failure.

 ?? HUANG SHIH-CI / CHINA TIMES ?? Service partially resumed after a derailed train near Xinma Station in Yilan county, Taiwan, was removed on Monday.
HUANG SHIH-CI / CHINA TIMES Service partially resumed after a derailed train near Xinma Station in Yilan county, Taiwan, was removed on Monday.

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