The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Death toll keeps rising in Greece’s deadliest train crash

- 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 appears 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 380 kilometers (235 miles) north of Athens.

STATIONMAS­TER ARRESTED; MINISTER RESIGNS

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 is due to appear before a pros-*

ecutor Thursday 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 added, “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 Thursday, while protests by left-wing groups broke out in Athens late Wednesday.

WRECKAGE MAKES RESCUE EFFORTS DIFFICULT

Emergency workers used cranes and other heavy machinery to move large pieces of the trains, revealing more bodies and dismembere­d remains. The operation was to continue overnight, with firefighte­rs proceeding painstakin­gly through the wreckage.

“It’s unlikely there will be survivors, but hope dies last,” said rescuer Nikos Zygouris.

Larissa’s chief coroner, Roubini Leondari, said 43 bodies had been brought to her for examinatio­n, and would require DNA identifica­tion as they were largely disfigured.

“Most (of the bodies) are young people,” she told ERT. “They are in very bad condition.”

Greece’s firefighti­ng service said 57 people remained hospitaliz­ed late Wednesday, including six in intensive care. More than 15 others were discharged after receiving treatment.

More than 200 people who were unharmed or suffered minor injuries were taken by bus to Thessaloni­ki, 130 kilometers (80 miles) to the north. Police took their names as they arrived, in an effort to track anyone who may be missing.

Hellenic Train, which operates all of Greece’s passenger and cargo trains, including those that collided, offered its “heartfelt condolence­s” to the victims’ families. The company belongs to Italy’s state railways.

Eight rail employees were

killed in the crash, including the two drivers of the freight train and the two drivers of the passenger train, according to Greek Railroad Workers Union President Yannis Nitsas.

The union called the oneday strike to protest what it said was chronic neglect of Greece’s railways by successive government­s.

“Unfortunat­ely, our longstandi­ng demands for staff hirings, better training and above all use of modern safety technology always end up in the wastepaper basket,” it said in a statement.

PASSENGERS SAY TRAIN CRASH WAS LIKE AN EXPLOSION

A teenage survivor who did not give his name to reporters said that just before the crash he felt sudden braking and saw sparks — and then there was a sudden stop.

“Our carriage didn’t derail, but the ones in front did and were smashed,” he said, visibly shaken. He used a bag to break the window of his car, the fourth, and escape.

Gogakos said the crash felt like an explosion, and some smoke entered the carriage. He said some passengers escaped

through windows but that after a few minutes, crew members were able to open the doors and let people out.

Multiple cars derailed and at least one burst into flames.

“Temperatur­es reached 1,300 degrees Celsius (2,372 Fahrenheit), which makes it even more difficult to identify the people who were in it,” fire service spokespers­on Vassilis Varthakoyi­annis said.

A man who was trying to ascertain the fate of his daughter, who was on the train, saying he had a harrowing phone conversati­on with her before she was cut off.

“She told me, ‘We’re on fire . ... My hair is burning,’” he told ERT, without giving his name.

GREECE GOES FROM CARNIVAL TO MOURNING

Many of the passengers were students returning to Thessaloni­ki from Carnival, but officials said but no detailed passenger list was available. This year was the first time the festival, which precedes Lent, was celebrated in full since the start of the pandemic in 2020.

The government declared three days of national mourning from Wednesday, while flags flew at half-staff outside all European Commission buildings in Brussels.

Visiting the accident scene, Prime Minister Mitsotakis said the government must help the injured recover and identify the dead.

“I can guarantee one thing: We will find out the causes of this tragedy and we will do all that’s in our power so that something like this never happens again,” Mitsotakis said.

Tuesday’s was Greece’s worst rail crash since 1968, when 34 people were killed in a crash in the southern Peloponnes­e region.

Greek President Katerina Sakellarop­oulou broke off an official visit to Moldova to visit the scene, laying flowers beside the wreckage.

Pope Francis offered his condolence­s to the families of the dead, in a message sent to the president of the Greek bishops conference on his behalf by the Vatican’s secretary of state,

Condolence­s poured in from around the world, including neighborin­g Turkey, Greece’s historic regional rival. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan expressed sorrow and wishes for a speedy recovery for those injured, his office said.

Despite the frosty relations between the two NATO allies, Greece’s leadership had called Erdogan last month following a massive earthquake that killed tens of thousands in Turkey.

In Athens, several hundred members of leftwing groups marched late Wednesday to protest the train deaths. Minor clashes broke out as some protesters threw stones at the offices of Greece’s rail operator and riot police, and set dumpsters on fire. No arrests or injuries were reported.

Paphitis reported from Athens, Greece. Derek Gatopoulos in Athens and Patrick Quinn and David Rising in Bangkok contribute­d to this story.

 ?? GIANNIS PAPANIKOS - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Debris of trains lie on the rail lines after a collision in Tempe, about 376kilomet­res (235miles) north of Athens, near Larissa city, Greece, Wednesday, March 1. A passenger train carrying hundreds of people, including many university students returning home from holiday, collided at high speed with an oncoming freight train before midnight on Tuesday.
GIANNIS PAPANIKOS - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Debris of trains lie on the rail lines after a collision in Tempe, about 376kilomet­res (235miles) north of Athens, near Larissa city, Greece, Wednesday, March 1. A passenger train carrying hundreds of people, including many university students returning home from holiday, collided at high speed with an oncoming freight train before midnight on Tuesday.
 ?? GIANNIS PAPANIKOS - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Greek Orthodox priest stands near firefighte­rs as they operate after a collision in Tempe, about 376 kilometres (235miles) north of Athens, near Larissa city, Greece, Wednesday, March 1. Rescuers searched Wednesday through the burned-out wreckage of two trains that slammed into each other in northern Greece, killing and injured dozens of passengers.
GIANNIS PAPANIKOS - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Greek Orthodox priest stands near firefighte­rs as they operate after a collision in Tempe, about 376 kilometres (235miles) north of Athens, near Larissa city, Greece, Wednesday, March 1. Rescuers searched Wednesday through the burned-out wreckage of two trains that slammed into each other in northern Greece, killing and injured dozens of passengers.

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