Spain crash victims identified
Wed, Jul 05, 2006 - Page 6
Distraught relatives and friends began
arriving yesterday at the municipal morgue of this eastern port city, a day
after the worst subway accident in Spain 's history left 41 people
dead.
Forensic experts said all but one of the
victims' bodies had been identified. Thirty were women and most were Spaniards,
although Red Cross workers said there was at least one foreign national.
The subway train derailed and overturned on
Monday in a tunnel near Jesus station in downtown Valencia . Authorities and witnesses
said the train was going too fast and that one of its wheels had broken into
pieces.
But Valencia 's regional Transport
Minister Jose Ramon Garcia Anton said preliminary inspections showed the wheels
and the train tracks appeared to be in perfect condition. He said the likely
cause was speeding.
Garcia Anton described the scene inside the
tunnel as "alarming, a pile of twisted steel, bent and destroyed
carriages, broken glass and bent doors."
Of the 47 people injured, 12 remained in
hospital and two of those were reported to be in a critical condition.
The train was crowded, as the accident
occurred shortly after 1pm when many people would have been heading home for
lunch.
Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero
cut short a visit to India
to travel to Valencia .
Officials said he was expected to attend a funeral mass at Valencia 's
cathedral yesterday evening. King Juan Carlos and Queen Sofia were also
expected to attend the mass.
Police experts in disaster management were
deployed to establish why the train had derailed.
Hundreds of thousands of people were
traveling to Valencia
yesterday for this week's World Meeting of the Families, to be attended on
Saturday and Sunday by Pope Benedict XVI.
The pope prayed for the victims and
"has followed with pain ... the dramatic reports," the Vatican said.
Organizers called off all festive
celebrations that had been planned ahead of Benedict's visit.
It was the second accident on Valencia 's No.
1 line in less than a year. A September collision involving three trains
injured at least 30 people, four of them seriously.
Jorge Alvarez, secretary-general of the
Independent Railway Union, said it was too early to blame Monday's accident on
human error.
He said his union repeatedly warned of
safety problems on Valencia 's
18-year-old subway system, particularly the No. 1 line.
"The train began to go faster than
usual and started to move from one side to the other," Cesar Hernandez
Nunez, a 21-year-old student traveling in the second car, told the newspaper El
Mundo.
"Right after that it was chaos,"
he said.
Nunez said he was able to break open a door
to leave the train.
"When I got to the track I noticed
there were only two carriages. The first had overturned and mine was in a
normal position," he said. "There were people on the ground. I
couldn't think very much. I pre-ferred to turn away."
About 150 people were evacuated from the
station, authorities said.
More than 60 million people used Valencia 's
subway system last year -- some 165,000 people a day, according to its Web
site. The subway has four lines and 116 stations in this city of 800,000 on the
country's east coast, some 350km
from Madrid .
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網址:
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2006/07/05 /2003317373
Structure of the Lead:
WHO-Valencia's No. 1
WHEN-on Monday
WHAT-The subway train derailed and overturned
WHY-the train was going too fast and that one of its wheels had broken
into pieces
WHERE-in a tunnel near Jesus station in downtown Valencia
HOW-The train began to go faster than usual and started to move from one
side to the other
Keywords:
1.morgue : 太平間
2.Forensic experts : 法醫專家
3.derailed : 脫軌
4.preliminary inspections : 初步調查
5.tunnel : 隧道
6.
funeral : 葬禮
7.
cathedral : 大教堂
8.
secretary-general : 秘書長
9.
chaos : 一片混亂
10.
evacuated from : 疏散