Western Mail

Two dead and 110 hurt in latest Amtrak crash

- Meg Kinnard newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

AN Amtrak passenger train has slammed into a freight train parked on a side track in South Carolina, killing two Amtrak employees and injuring more than 110 people.

It was the third deadly wreck involving Amtrak in less than two months.

The Silver Star was on its way from New York to Miami with nearly 150 people aboard at around 2.45am when it ploughed into the CSX train at an estimated 59mph, Governor Henry McMaster said.

The crash happened around a switchyard about 10 miles south of Columbia.

The governor said investigat­ors had yet to determine how the Amtrak train ended up on that stretch of track.

“The CSX was on the track it was supposed to be on,” Mr McMaster said.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board has sent investigat­ors.

Mr McMaster said 116 people were taken to four hospitals.

The main trauma hospital in the area had three patients in critical or serious condition, with the rest treated for minor injuries such as cuts, bruises and whiplash, said Dr Steve Shelton, Palmetto health director of emergency preparedne­ss.

The locomotive­s of both trains were left crumpled, the Amtrak engine on its side.

One carriage in the middle of the Amtrak train was snapped in half, forming a V off to one side of the tracks.

“It’s a horrible thing to see, to understand the force involved,” Mr McMaster said after touring the scene. Many passengers were asleep when the train began shaking violently and then slammed to a halt, passenger Derek Pettaway told CBS.

“You knew we’d hit something or we’d derailed,” he said.

Elliot Smith told The State newspaper of Columbia that he was staying with a friend when they heard what sounded like a propane tank exploding. “The sound was so loud, you instantly knew it was bad,” he said.

Mr Smith said he and his friend saw passengers limping along the tracks, while others tried to get everyone out of the carriages.

Amtrak officials gathered up luggage and other belongings and within hours put passengers on buses to their destinatio­ns.

Before being sent on their way, those who were not hurt were taken to a shelter set up at a middle school, and local businesses provided coffee and breakfast.

“We know they are shaken up quite a bit.

“We know this is like nothing else they have ever been through. So we wanted to get them out of the cold, get them out of the weather - get them to a warm place,” sheriff ’s spokesman Adam Myrick said.

On Wednesday, a chartered Amtrak train carrying Republican members of Congress to a strategy retreat slammed into a rubbish truck at a crossing in rural Virginia, killing one person in the truck and injuring six others.

And on December 18, an Amtrak train ran off the rails along a curve during its inaugural run on a route south of Tacoma, Washington, killing three people and injuring dozens more.

It was travelling at nearly 80mph, more than twice the speed limit.

 ??  ?? > An aerial view of the site of the train crash between an Amtrak train, bottom right, and a CSX freight train, top left, yesterday
> An aerial view of the site of the train crash between an Amtrak train, bottom right, and a CSX freight train, top left, yesterday

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