Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Death toll rises to 43 after 2 trains collide

- By Costas Kantouris and Nicholas Paphitis

TEMPE, GREECE » Rescuers searched late into the night Wednesday for survivors amid the mangled, burnedout wrecks of two trains that collided in northern Greece, killing at least 43 people and crumpling carriages into twisted steel knots in the country's deadliest rail crash.

The impact just before midnight Tuesday threw some passengers into ceilings and out the windows.

“My head hit the roof of the carriage with the jolt,” Stefanos Gogakos, who was in a rear car, told state broadcaste­r ERT. He said windows shattered, showering riders with glass.

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis called the collision of the passenger train and a freight train “a horrific rail accident without precedent in our country,” and pledged a full, independen­t investigat­ion.

He said it appeared the crash was “mainly due to a tragic human error,” but did not elaborate.

The train from Athens to Thessaloni­ki was carrying 350 passengers, many of them students returning from raucous Carnival celebratio­ns. While the track is double, both trains were traveling in opposite directions on the same line near the Vale of Tempe, a river valley about 235 miles north of Athens.

Authoritie­s arrested the stationmas­ter at the train's last stop, in the city of Larissa.

They did not release the man's name or the reason for the arrest, but the stationmas­ter is responsibl­e for rail traffic on that stretch of the tracks. He was due to appear before a prosecutor today to be formally charged.

Transporta­tion Minister Kostas Karamanlis resigned, saying he was stepping down “as a basic indication of respect for the memory of the people who died so unfairly.”

Karamanlis said he had made “every effort” to improve a railway system that had been “in a state that doesn't befit the 21st century.”

But, he said, “When something this tragic happens, it's impossible to continue as if nothing has happened.”

The union representi­ng train workers announced a 24-hour strike for today while protests by left-wing groups broke out in Athens late Wednesday. Athens metro workers also called a 24-hour strike for today, saying they face similar problems as railway employees.

Emergency workers used cranes and other heavy machinery.

 ?? GIANNIS PAPANIKOS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Debris of two wrecked trains lie on the rail lines in Larissa, Greece, on Wednesday.
GIANNIS PAPANIKOS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Debris of two wrecked trains lie on the rail lines in Larissa, Greece, on Wednesday.

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