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At least 3 dead, 10 hurt as Belgian trains collide

By JOHN-THOR DAHLBURG and VIRGINIA MAYO, Associated Press
Published: June 6, 2016, 8:57pm

HERMALLE-SOUS-HUY, Belgium — A passenger train slammed at high speed into a slow-moving freight train in eastern Belgium, killing three people and sending 10 others to the hospital, authorities said Monday. The accident came hours after reported lightning strikes and a signal disruption on the line.

Two cars from the passenger train derailed when it rear-ended the freight train around 11 p.m. Sunday in Hermalle-Sous-Huy. Belgian prosecutor Brigitte Leroy said the passenger train was traveling around 60 mph, and the freight 6 to 9 mph at the time of the crash.

State broadcaster RTBF said the dead included two passengers and the train’s driver. RTBF reported many of the passengers were students in their early 20s returning to school after the weekend.

Ten people were hospitalized, local hospitals reported. Midday Monday, Belgian media said only one of the injured was being treated: a 26-year-old man who had two operations for broken ribs and vertebrae and abdominal pains. A total of 27 were treated on-site.

Francis Dejon, St. Georges-sur-Meuse’s mayor, told a news conference that the passenger train’s first car was so badly smashed in the wreck “it was curled back on itself.” The second of the six cars derailed and came to a stop on its side.

Belgian railway police and state prosecutors were investigating the cause of the accident.

Belgium’s King Philippe and Prime Minister Charles Michel visited the crash site Monday, thanking rescue workers and viewing the derailed, wrecked rail cars. Michel, through a spokesman, said no effort would be spared to find out the accident’s cause.

It took rescuers three hours to free people from the wreckage, which carried around 40 people when it crashed 17 miles southwest of the city of Liege. The wheels and axle of one train car were knocked loose by the impact. A large chunk of wreckage jutted up from the freight train.

Belgium’s national railway operation, SNCB, reported on Twitter Sunday that there was “a signals disruption” on the rail line about an hour and a half before the wreck, but said the problem had been solved.

A spokesman for Infrabel, a separate company that oversees Belgium’s rail infrastructure, said installations where the wreck occurred “were hit by lightning” earlier Sunday.

“It’s an element we’re going to have to look at, but it’s premature to see this as the cause of the accident,” spokesman Frederic Sacre said.

The wreck halted train service between Namur and Liege, two of Belgium’s largest cities, and an SNCB spokeswoman said it could take several days to clear.

Leroy, the prosecutor, said it may be months before the crash investigation is complete.

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