Fiji Sun

Taiwan train crash driver disabled speed controls

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The driver of the train that crashed in Taiwan on Sunday killing 18 people has said he turned off its speed-control system before the accident.

He told a court he had disabled the system after earlier in the day it had slowed down the train because of a fault. Prosecutor­s accuse the driver of negligence for failing to switch the system back on.

The deadly crash is the territory’s worst rail accident in 27 years. A total of 366 passengers were on the train when all eight of its carriages derailed. At least three children are among the dead.

The train came off the rails while moving at almost 140km/h (87mph), nearly twice the speed limit imposed due to a curve in the track, officials said.

Prosecutor­s questioned the injured driver on Tuesday before he was returned to hospital.

According to officials, the driver said he had switched off the speed control system after a failure slowed down the train earlier in the journey.

“He should have turned the system back on at the next stop,” court spokesman Huang Yong-sheng said according to Reuters news agency. “The defendant is highly suspected to have been negligent.”

The Puyuma Express 6432 service derailed close to Xinma station, near the town of Su’ao, about 70km from the territory’s capital Taipei..

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