Chattanooga Times Free Press

Overpass collapse kills at least 24

- BY FABIOLA SÁNCHEZ

MEXICO CITY — The death toll from the collapse of an overpass on the Mexico City metro rose to 24 Tuesday as crews untangled train carriages from the steel and concrete wreckage that fell onto a roadway.

Monday night’s accident was one of the deadliest in the history of the subway, and questions quickly arose about the structural integrity of the mass transit system, among the world’s busiest.

Another 27 people remained hospitaliz­ed of the more than 70 injured when the support beams collapsed about 10:30 p.m. as a train passed along the elevated section, Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum said.

On Tuesday, a crane carefully lowered a train car containing four bodies to the ground.

Of the 24 killed, 21 died at the scene, while the others died at hospitals. Only five have been identified so far. Children were among the fatalities, Sheinbaum said.

On Tuesday afternoon, Carlos Miramar waited under a tent on metal chairs with two other relatives to receive the body of his uncle. The 25-year-old student had been awake since beginning an “exasperati­ng” odyssey the previous night that took them to seven hospitals and multiple prosecutor’s offices in search of his uncle.

Now they had found 38-year-old Carlos Pineda, a man he described as a soccer fan and buoyant personalit­y. Pineda is survived by his wife, two children ages 7 and 13, and his mother.

“I’m tired and unable to sleep,” Miramar said. “He didn’t deserve this end. He was a good father, good husband and good son.”

Initial analysis pointed to a “presumed structural failure,” Sheinbaum said, promising a thorough and independen­t inquiry. She added that a Norwegian firm had been hired to investigat­e.

“I did not have any report nor alert of any problem that could have led us to this situation,” she said.

The overpass was about 16 feet above the road in the borough of Tlahuac, but the train ran above a concrete median strip, which apparently lessened the casualties among motorists.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MARCO UGARTE ?? Workers remove a damaged subway car after it was lowered, with the help of a crane, from a collapsed elevated section of the metro in Mexico City, on Tuesday.
AP PHOTO/MARCO UGARTE Workers remove a damaged subway car after it was lowered, with the help of a crane, from a collapsed elevated section of the metro in Mexico City, on Tuesday.

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