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Six dead, 60 injured in Taiwan train accident

Rescuerers look at a derailed and overturned train on Alishan in Chiayi, southern Taiwan, on April 27, 2011. At least six people were killed and 60 others injured when a train carrying Chinese tourists was hit by a falling tree at a popular mountain spot in central Taiwan, officials said. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Taipei (AFP) April 27, 2011
At least six people were killed and 60 others injured Wednesday when a train carrying Chinese tourists was hit by a falling tree at a popular mountain spot in central Taiwan, officials said.

The sightseeing train was travelling along Mount Ali when the tree trunk fell, causing four carriages to derail and overturn, said an official at the forestry bureau, which supervises the area.

Twenty-two people were seriously injured, according to the bureau.

The tourism bureau later confirmed that a total of 108 Chinese tourists were on the train, of whom at least four were killed and 34 hurt.

"We are saddened by the accident, and the cause is being investigated," President Ma Ying-jeou told reporters.

Taiwanese officials have pledged to help relatives of the Chinese tourists to come to the island.

TV footage showed one of the carriages upside down, as it had apparently dropped several metres (yards) from a small bridge in the densely forested region.

Injured passengers were airlifted by helicopter out of the area, which is otherwise only accessible via winding mountain roads, officials said.

Other injured passengers were rushed to nearby hospitals for treatment.

Train services were suspended following the accident, the forestry bureau said.



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Shanghai (AFP) April 14, 2011
China's rail minister said the nation's high-speed trains will run at a slower pace than previously announced, to make journeys safer and more affordable. The new high-speed trains will run no faster than 300 kilometres (186 miles) per hour instead of the current top speed of 350 kilometres per hour, Sheng Guangzu said in an interview posted Thursday on the ministry's website. Sheng's co ... read more







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