Seven dead, more than sixty injured in Eurocity train crash in Moravia
Seven people have died and more than sixty are reported injured in a train crash in the eastern part of the Czech Republic. The accident happened at approximately 10:30 am on Friday, some 20 km south of the city of Ostrava, when a Prague-bound Eurocity train from Krakow, in Poland, hit fallen debris from an overhead bridge which had collapsed onto the railway tracks.
The region’s governor Evžen Tošenovský was the first official to arrive at the scene. He told reporters that he had only ever seen a disaster of such proportions in movies. Prime Minister Mirek Topolánek, together with Deputy PM Jiří Čunek, a native of the region, and Transportation Minister Aleš Hřebíček also headed for the site of the accident as did two Polish officials Prime Minister Donald Tusk and Health Minister Ewa Kopaczowa.
The bridge which collapsed was undergoing reconstruction that began in April this year, and had reportedly been in a very poor state. The cause of the collapse is not clear and will be subject to thorough investigation by the authorities.The crash happened on one of the busiest Czech railway lines connecting the country to Poland and Slovakia; train services in the area are expected to face severe delays lasting well into the weekend.
Two emergency phone lines have been set up for the victims’ families: (+420) 974 723 202 and (+420) 974 723 201.