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One dead, dozens injured in Swiss train crash

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  #1  
Old 23rd July 2010, 21:48
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One dead, dozens injured in Swiss train crash

One person has died and 42 were injured after a popular tourist train, the Glacier Express, derailed in the Alps on Friday.
The cause of the accident is not yet known. The last three carriages of the train, which was travelling between Lax and Fiesch in canton Valais, came off the track around 12pm near a viaduct in the Goms Valley.
Passengers on the train told Swiss public television that they heard a loud bang and felt intense vibrations as the carriages derailed in a gentle curve with a slight incline. Two carriages tipped over while another derailed but remained upright.
Rescue workers, including as many as seven helicopter crews, 15 doctors, several dozen firemen, paramedics and police officers were on the scene. Police said between ten and 12 people were seriously injured.
Valais police information chief Jean-Marie Bornet said most of the passengers in the two overturned carriages were Japanese.
210 people onboard
“We have to expect that the train was quite full because it’s the height of the tourist season,” Peter Abgottspon, a reporter on site with Radio Rottu, a regional broadcaster, told swissinfo.ch. “The Glacier Express train is always quite full at this time of year.”
There were about 210 people on the train, a railway spokesman said.
The Fiesch fire chief told a media conference that rescuers had to use hydraulic equipment to free trapped passengers. Those who were lightly injured or escaped unscathed were taken to Fiesch by bus.
Rail traffic between Lax and Fiesch would remain closed until Saturday, authorities said.
Rare
Rail interruptions, let alone accidents, are rare in Switzerland. The Glacier Express, dubbed the "slowest express train in the world", is known as much for its majestic mountain climbs as for its pedestrian speed of 30km/h on average.
The 80-year-old service runs several times a day all year round, carrying some 250,000 passengers annually.
It starts in Zermatt, at the base of Switzerland's iconic Matterhorn mountain, and rumbles through some of the country's most spectacular alpine scenery. Train carriages often have special large windows that sweep high onto the roof so tourists can take in the mountain views. Some of those windows shattered during the accident and caused injuries.
After 7.5 hours, 291 bridges and 91 tunnels, the route ends in the resort of St Moritz.
The last time Switzerland had a fatal train crash was in 2006, when three railway workers were killed after their runaway train travelled for more than 30km with no brakes and slammed into another train near Thun, south of the Swiss capital Bern.
That was the worst railway accident since 1994, when a crane on a maintenance train swung into an express train, killing nine people.
Federal experts say they will investigate possible causes for Friday's accident.

Reported by "swissinfo.ch" and agencies


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  #2  
Old 23rd July 2010, 22:45
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Evening John, many thanks for posting this, let us hope there are no more fatalities.
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Old 23rd July 2010, 22:50
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Thanks for the post John. I'll echo Chris's hope that there are no more fatalities.

Best wishes,

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Old 23rd July 2010, 23:41
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A train crash in Switzerland ? - the world must be coming to an end !
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Old 24th July 2010, 05:04
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The Swiss will be sure to want to find out what caused this crash – they are very proud of their safety record.
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Old 24th July 2010, 05:47
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Thanks for posting that John.
Any railway accident anywhere in the world is always interesting but sad news mate.

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Old 27th July 2010, 08:50
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It's cheerless to hear transportation accidents. Just a few days ago, another C130 had crushed and the pilot is dead. What makes it worst is that, a thing that is intended for your convenience will end your life. Heartbreaking isn't it?
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Old 30th July 2010, 21:08
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Human error caused Glacier Express crash

A probe into the derailment of a Swiss tourist train in which one person died and 42 others were injured has found the driver was going "too fast".
The driver of the Glacier Express train had been going about 20km above the 35km/h permitted level when the accident occurred on July 23.
Federal investigators found he had sped up too early, not allowing the whole train to cross a line marking the end of the 35km/h zone and the start of the 55km/h track.

Representatives of the police, the Valais cantonal government, tourism authorities and railways had all gathered for a news conference announcing the findings on Friday. Matterhorn Gotthard Bahn said it was "deeply saddened" by the most serious accident in its history and the fact that it was caused by human error had enhanced their dismay. The driver involved is in a state of shock, said the firm. He has been employed by the firm for eight years and has never before had an accident. The incident will be reviewed by an investigating magistrate in the coming weeks.

Jacques Melly, vice-president of the Valais cantonal government, told assembled media: “The government of Valais deeply regrets this tragedy. All our thoughts today are with the victims. The whole Valais shares their grief.”

The train had been travelling between Lax and Fiesch in canton Valais and came off the track near a viaduct in the Goms Valley. One Japanese tourist died in the crash and of the 42 people injured, 28 were Japanese.
Eight Japanese tourists are still in hospital. According to a press officer from ANA Sales, part of Japan’s second largest carrier All Nippon Airlines, one of the three tour operators which organised the group’s trip, there is an ANA employee looking after each one of them, in accordance with company custom. The firm says that it is in negotiations over compensation for the affected tourists. It has also cancelled its two other planned Glacier Express trips in August, although other agencies are continuing to send people.
The accident has been big headline news in Japan over the past week, with many journalists travelling to Switzerland to cover the latest developments.

There was great interest in the arrival of the dead victim’s two sons, who flew over to identify her body earlier this week. Her husband is still in hospital and the sons said that he didn’t want Switzerland’s image to suffer.

Criticism

There has been intense criticism in the Japanese media over the fact that the Glacier Express started running again just two days after the accident. It is, however, only allowed to go at 10km/h on the incident-area track.
Members of the Japanese community who swissinfo.ch spoke to were also surprised at the move, as was the ANA spokesman. “It’s impossible to imagine, to accept that the train starts running again if you don’t know the cause. In Japan the government does not give permission to run the trains again before the cause is clear,” he said.
Another long-term Japanese Geneva resident, who asked not to be named, said she would not take the train until the reason for the accident had been found.

Jean-Pierre Schmid of the Matterhorn Gotthard Bahn told Friday's news conference that trains had begun running again as it was an essential railway servicing the whole region.

"Beloved route"

Gen Aoto, president of the Japan Club of Zurich, said that the Glacier Express was one of the most beloved routes for Japanese tourists. “Everyone wants to come to Switzerland at least once in their lifetime,” he told swissinfo.ch.
The group was mainly made up of older retirees, who had saved up for the trip. “They came with big expectations and then encountered such a tragic accident which is very painful for me and other Japanese. We understand what kind of pain they went through. Their feeling of heaven became like hell.” The Japanese have an image of Switzerland as a safe place. Finding the accident’s cause is one of the most important things the authorities and train company can do to restore this shaken faith, added Aoto. He added that the fact that Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey had apologised to her Japanese counterpart, as had members of the Matterhorn Gotthard Bahn, had not been widely reported in the Japanese media, but that this was important. He pointed to a case in Japan concerning the Swiss lift company Schindler which did not apologise early enough for an accident, causing an outcry

Cultural differences

The Matterhorn Gotthard Bahn has been receiving help from Roger Zbinden, head of Asian key markets at Switzerland Tourism, who has been living in Japan for seven years. He said that cultural differences had to be considered in the communications around the accident. This included advising on what to wear – a tie, which is not always a given in Switzerland in the summer – and on emotional content. “Usually in the west, we start with the facts, we say this was the reason and we say we are sorry,” Zbinden told swissinfo.ch ahead of the media conference. “In Japan so that you can actually communicate and get the message through, you have to address first the emotional level, so you have to say we are terribly sorry that this happened and our sympathies are with the families of the deceased and the victims. Only after this can you give the facts.”

He said the different reaction to the train being put back into operation quickly was also cultural. For the Swiss, it signalled that the train is safe, but this was certainly not the case of the Japanese.

Source: Isobel Leybold-Johnson, swissinfo.ch and agencies
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Old 30th July 2010, 22:33
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Thanks for the update John. I'm sorry that a person lost their life and others were hurt, but the reason is important to the Japanese. In Europe, we want to get the service back to normal as soon as possable. Just shows the difference in European and Far East culture. In some parts of Southern Africa, an apology is also more important than the cause. Only then does the cause come in to it.
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Old 1st August 2010, 18:19
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I am one of the injured passenger. It was a nightmare.
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