Cape Times

Plea to premier to help asylum-seekers Horror metro death plunge

- | AFP

A WOMAN approached Australia’s Prime Minister Scott Morrison in tears yesterday, making an emotional plea for him to help her family in Cameroon and asylum-seekers from Africa.

The incident was caught on camera after Morrison had finished a news conference in Rockhampto­n, Queensland. Morrison, whose government has a hardline immigratio­n policy, told the woman government officials would help her. “I’ve lost half of my family. I’ve got no family left if you don’t help me. Everybody will die. Help me, help me,” she pleaded.

Cameroon’s two western Anglophone regions have been gripped by fighting since 2017 as English-speaking rebels try to break away from the predominan­tly Francophon­e government. More than 3 500 people have died and 700 000 have been displaced in the violence with both sides accused of committing atrocities.

Under Canberra’s immigratio­n policy, asylum-seekers who reach Australia are sent to Australian-run detention camps offshore.

AN ELEVATED metro line collapsed in the Mexican capital yesterday, leaving at least 23 people dead and dozens injured as a train came plunging down, authoritie­s said.

Carriages were seen hanging from the overpass in a tangle of twisted cables with the ends pointing towards the ground in a V-shape.

“Unfortunat­ely there are 23 deceased,” including minors, Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum told reporters at the scene in the south of the capital.

About 65 others received hospital treatment following the dramatic accident, one of the worst to strike the Mexico City metro since it was inaugurate­d in 1969.

Anxious relatives gathered at the site awaiting news of those believed to have been aboard the train.

Efrain Juarez said that his son was in the wreckage.

“My daughter-in-law called us. She was with him and she told us the structure fell down over them,” he told AFP.

Another man who did not give his name said that his brother was among those trapped.

“He came with his wife and they managed to get her out, but he was crushed there and we don’t know anything,” he said.

Dozens of emergency workers were seen trying to rescue victims from the carriages. The work had to be suspended because of fears the wreckage was too unstable, but it later resumed with the help of a crane.

A car was trapped under the rubble, but a person inside managed to get out alive, she said. The police, who brought rescue dogs, urged onlookers to move back in case of falling debris.

“Suddenly I saw that the structure was shaking,” an unidentifi­ed witness told the Mexican television network Televisa.

“When the dust cleared we ran to see if we could help. There were no screams. I don’t know if they were in shock,” she added.

Medics were seen taking the injured away on stretchers. The casualties were rushed to different hospitals in the city, Sheinbaum said. She promised a structural examinatio­n of the affected metro line, which will remain closed, and a full investigat­ion into the causes of the accident.

“We will report the whole truth. Our support to all victims,” Sheinbaum tweeted.

One man, Jose Martinez, told reporters that he had a miraculous escape because he was unable to leave work in time to catch the ill-fated train. “I was saved by like 15 minutes. It’s good that nothing happened to me,” he said.

The Mexico City subway has 12 lines and carries millions of passengers each day. Line 12, where the accident struck, was inaugurate­d in October 2012 by then mayor Marcelo Ebrard, who is now foreign minister.

Writing on Twitter, Ebrard offered his co-operation with the investigat­ion to establish the causes and responsibi­lity for what he called a “terrible tragedy.” Ricardo de la Torre, a Mexico City resident who lives close to Line 12, said that he had been worried about the quality of the overpass because the trains make nearby buildings shake.

“By that simple fact we know that the constructi­on is bad,” he said.

In one of the worst accidents on the network, two metro trains rammed into each other leaving 23 dead and 55 injured in October 1975.

Monday’s incident comes just over a year after two subway trains collided in Mexico City, leaving one dead and around 40 injured as panicked passengers escaped through dense smoke.

In January this year, one person died and 29 suffered smoke inhalation injuries in a fire in the metro’s control centre.

The latest accident comes at a time when Mexico is struggling to cope with the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has left more than 217 000 people dead in the country – one of the world’s highest tolls.

 ?? | EPA ?? EMERGENCY services agents work at the scene of an accident at Mexico City’s subway yesterday. At least 23 people died and dozens were injured when a bridge on the elevated track collapsed.
| EPA EMERGENCY services agents work at the scene of an accident at Mexico City’s subway yesterday. At least 23 people died and dozens were injured when a bridge on the elevated track collapsed.

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