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China revises train crash toll to 36
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) July 25, 2011

China on Monday revised the death toll from a high-speed train crash to 36, with 192 people wounded, in the country's worst rail accident since 2008.

A statement from the railway ministry gave the new figures and said the cause of the accident on the outskirts of the eastern Chinese city of Wenzhou was still being investigated.

Railway Minister Sheng Guangzu said the government would "take resolute and strong measures to carry out a serious safety inspection campaign to completely identify and eradicate hidden safety risks".

"(We) should firmly prevent any more serious accidents and quickly stabilise the safe transportation situation," he added.

Official news agency Xinhua on Sunday put the death toll at 35 and later reported that eight bodies had been pulled from the wreckage, but it was not immediately clear whether those were included in the original count.

The government moved swiftly to ease public concern after the accident, sacking three senior officials at the Shanghai railway bureau and launching an "urgent overhaul" of national rail safety.

Hundreds of millions of Chinese depend on the country's railways and any problems generate tremendous public interest in a country where, despite a three-decade economic boom, air travel remains beyond the means of most people.

A new $33 billion high-speed link between Beijing and Shanghai opened to passengers amid much fanfare on June 30 -- a year ahead of schedule -- but has suffered power cuts and delays, prompting criticism on blogs and in the media.

Saturday's rail accident was the worst since April 2008, when 72 people were killed and more than 400 injured when one train derailed and another collided with it in the eastern province of Shandong.

earlier related report
33 dead after Chinese bullet trains collide
Beijing (AFP) July 24, 2011 - Emergency workers battled on Sunday to rescue survivors from the mangled wreckage of two Chinese bullet trains involved in a high-speed collision which left 33 dead and nearly 200 injured, reports said.

The first train had been halted by a lightning strike and was rear-ended by the second, state media said, causing two carriages to fall off a viaduct in a disaster likely to raise fresh questions over the safety of China's rapid rail expansion.

Chinese President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao called for "all-out efforts" to rescue injured passengers, the official Xinhua news agency said.

Railways Minister Sheng Guangzu, who was heading to the scene from Beijing, ordered an "in-depth investigation" into Saturday's accident, the agency reported.

The high-speed service from Hangzhou to Wenzhou, in eastern China's Zhejiang province, was rammed from behind in Wenzhou's Shuangyu town, China National Radio said.

It derailed and two of its carriages fell from an elevated section of track at around 8:27 pm (1227 GMT), Xinhua reported, citing the provincial government. Some 190 people were injured, it said.

Pictures posted on Chinese websites and microblogs showed a long rail carriage standing vertically, with one end leaning on the viaduct and the other resting on the ground about 20 metres (66 feet) below.

A second carriage was lying fully on the ground below the track, having apparently fallen completely off, with rescue personnel swarming over it.

The photos also showed mangled metal sections of one carriage and people being carried away from the scene, although it was not clear whether those victims were injured or dead.

"We heard a 'bang' and it felt like an earthquake," Xinhua quoted one survivor, a woman surnamed Zhou, as saying.

"I immediately held my five-year-old kid to my arms," she said. She and the child were injured but survived, Xinhua said.

Another, unnamed survivor, aged 40, told the news agency he had been trapped in a carriage with more than 60 other passengers after the crash.

"We were trapped in the coach for more than one hour before five of us broke the window and crawled out," he said. The five rescued another two passengers, but one died shortly afterwards, the man said.

Xinhua said the capacity of each train car was about 100 passengers.

China National Radio quoted an unnamed Shanghai Railway Bureau official who had gone to the scene as saying the first train was halted by a lightning strike.

Xinhua said the train itself had been struck by lightning but other reports suggested it may not have been a direct hit.

The first four coaches of the second train had also been knocked off the track by the force of the collision, Xinhua said.

The accident occurred less than a month after China inaugurated with great fanfare a new flagship $33 billion line from Beijing to Shanghai that halves the rail journey time between China's two most important cities to five hours.

The line has suffered delays caused by power outages, sparking a slew of criticism online and in Chinese media.

China has recently poured money into a further expansion of the network but the huge investments have spurred allegations of corruption and raised concerns over costs and whether corners were being cut on rail safety.

In April 2008, 72 people were killed and more than 400 injured when one train derailed and another collided with it in the eastern province of Shandong.




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Father mourns daughter's loss in China rail crash
Shuangyu, China (AFP) July 25, 2011 - Sobbing uncontrollably, Chen Shengqiao had to be held up by two relatives on Monday as he mourned the loss of his young daughter in China's worst-ever high-speed rail accident.

His uncle Chen Hongdang looked on with tears in his eyes, smoking a cigarette and describing how his nephew had decided to take an earlier train from the eastern city of Hangzhou to Wenzhou, his home town.

"His 12-year-old daughter and his wife came on the evening train. The daughter died and his wife is in hospital with serious injuries," the uncle said, standing at a crematorium where relatives had come to pay their last respects.

The accident happened on Saturday in Shuangyu, on the outskirts of Wenzhou, when an express train apparently lost power after being struck by lightning and was hit by a second train, sending four carriages plunging from a viaduct.

The young girl was among at least 36 people killed in the collision -- the worst ever to hit the country's high-speed train network -- while more than 192 were injured.

Chen's daughter and wife were at the back of the first train, and received the full blow of the incoming train when it slammed into their carriage, his uncle said. The 12-year-old's body was only pulled out of the mangled wreckage 12 hours later.

"She was due to go study in the United States, and she was just coming home to spend some time with us before leaving," he told AFP.

"The rescuers just weren't quick enough. If they had pulled her out yesterday morning, she might have had a change to survive," he said as his nephew sat down on the floor crying, unable to get up again.

Chen's father -- the girl's grandfather -- soon followed suit, and was dragged out of the building by relatives as he wailed in pain.

The crash has raised questions about the safety of China's high-speed lines, prompting the government to order an "urgent" overhaul of rail safety and sack three senior officials at the Shanghai railway bureau.

Hundreds of millions of Chinese depend on the country's railways, and despite the country's three-decade economic boom, air travel remains beyond the means of most people.

On Sunday, survivor Lin Hui recalled the horror of the crash as he lay in hospital, his head covered in a bloody bandage and his neck covered with bruises.

"I got up and I realised that part of the carriage that I had been walking around had been completely squashed," the 49-year-old told AFP, hooked to a machine that monitored his heart rate and blood pressure.

"I remember seeing an older lady with a little kid -- they must be dead."

Lin said he regularly travelled from the eastern city of Hangzhou, where he works, further south to Fuzhou.

Despite the accident, he said, he would continue to take the train.





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FAST TRACK
Rapid growth of high-speed rail in China
Beijing (AFP) July 24, 2011
China only opened its high-speed rail service to passengers four years ago, but it now boasts the world's biggest network, with more than 8,300 kilometres of track - a figure that is growing rapidly. Trains are by far the most popular form of long-distance transport in the country of more than 1.3 billion people where, despite three decades of blistering economic growth, air travel remains ... read more


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