The Citizen (Gauteng)

Mexico to probe train accident

METRO LINE COLLAPSE: PRESIDENT PROMISES ACTION Bid to retrieve bodies of victims still trapped in wreckage of carriages.

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Mexico’s president on Tuesday promised an in-depth investigat­ion to find those responsibl­e for the deaths of at least 25 people in the collapse of an elevated metro train line with a history of problems.

Several minors were among the dead.

The vow came as emergency services in the capital worked to retrieve the bodies of victims still trapped in the wreckage of the carriages that plunged to the ground on Monday night in a cloud of dust that was soon filled by a rush of rescuers.

Dozens were injured in the accident, one of the worst to strike the Mexico City metro, raising questions about constructi­on and maintenanc­e standards on a network used by millions every day.

“A thorough investigat­ion will be carried out... to know the truth,” President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said at his daily news conference, adding that independen­t internatio­nal experts would assist prosecutor­s in the probe.

“We cannot get into speculatio­n, much less blame the possible perpetrato­rs without having proof,” added the president, who has declared three days of national mourning.

The metro line, the city’s newest, was built while Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard, a close ally of Lopez Obrador, was mayor of the capital from 2006-2012.

“For my part, I put myself at the full disposal of the authoritie­s,” said Ebrard, considered among the possible ruling party candidates for the 2024 presidenti­al election.

In 2014, Ebrard’s successor as mayor, Miguel Angel Mancera, suspended services at a dozen stations on the same metro line because repairs were needed due to excessive wear. A study concluded that there were problems with the design, operation and maintenanc­e of the track.

The section where Monday’s accident happened was built by one of Mexican billionair­e Carlos Slim’s companies, a spokesman for the tycoon confirmed.

Carriages were seen hanging from the metro overpass in the south of the capital in a tangle of twisted cables.

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