Michael Warren, Associated Press, Buenos Aires, Argentina | Thu, 02/23/2012 7:00 AM
Argentina train accident: Firemen rescue wounded passengers from a commuter train after a collision in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Wednesday. A packed train slammed into the end of the line in Buenos Aires' busy Once station Wednesday, killing dozens and injuring hundreds of morning commuters as passenger cars crumpled behind the engine. (AP/Anibal Greco)
A train packed with morning commuters slammed into a downtown station
on Wednesday, killing 49 people and injuring hundreds as passenger cars
crumpled and windows exploded around them. It was Argentina's worst train
accident in decades.
The cause wasn't immediately determined, but many pointed to a
deteriorating rail system. Some passengers reported signs the conductor was
struggling with the brakes before the crash, saying he kept overshooting
platforms and missed one entirely.
The dead include 48 adults and one child - most of whom had crowded
into the first two cars to get ahead of the rush-hour crowds on arrival. Some
600 people were injured, including 461 who were hospitalized, Transportation
Secretary J.P. Schiavi said.
"It was an accident like those in many other countries,"
Schiavi told a news conference, pointing to a newspaper clipping about a fatal
crash in Los Angeles. "In recent years, we've made huge investments"
in the system, he asserted.
As Schiavi spoke Wednesday afternoon, riot police faced off against
angry passengers in the closed Once station, where emergency workers spent
hours extracting dozens of people trapped inside the first car. Rescuers had to
carve open the roof and set up a pulley system to ease them out one by one.
Dozens of injured survivors on stretchers were lined up on the station
platform.
The 28-year-old conductor, who survived the crash, was apparently
well-rested, Schiavi said, having just begun his workday.
"Tiredness, his (young) age, the problems that a conductor might
face" are among the factors being investigated, he said. "This young
person had just begun his shift moments before the accident."
The motorman was hospitalized in intensive care and hasn't given a
statement, Schiavi said.
Passengers said the conductor seemed to struggle with the brakes,
missing his stopping marks at station after station, though a labor union
official said the train appeared to be in good working order.
"This machine left the shop yesterday and the brakes worked well.
From what we know, it braked without problems at previous stations. At this
point I don't want to speculate about the causes," union chief Ruben
Sobrero told Radio La Red.
Schiavi said the train was recorded slowing from about 30 miles per
hour (50 kph) to 12 miles per hour about 40 yards (meters) from the end of the
line. "We don't know what happened in those final 40 meters," he
said.
The train slammed into a shock-absorbing barrier at 8:33 a.m.,
smashing the front of the engine and crunching the much lighter cars behind it.
The second car penetrated nearly 20 feet (six meters) into the next, Schiavi
said.
Most damaged was the first car, where passengers shared space with
bicycles. Survivors said any people were injured in a jumble of metal and
glass. Security camera images showed windows exploding as the cars crumpled
into each other like an accordion, with a man on the adjacent platform
scrambling across the tracks to escape the wreck.
The rush-hour train carried more than 1,200 people, many standing so
tightly between the seats that they had nothing to hold onto. The hard stop
sent them flying inside the cars.
Many suffered bruises or lesser injuries, waiting for attention on the
station's platforms as helicopters and dozens of ambulances carried others to
nearby hospitals. The dead were carried out the back of the station, beyond the
view of television cameras.
It was Argentina's deadliest train accident since Feb. 1, 1970, when a
train smashed into another at full speed in suburban Buenos Aires, killing 200.
President Cristina Fernandez canceled her day's agenda due to the
accident, which raised fresh doubts about government investment in the train
system millions depend on. While largely privatized, the system depends on huge
state subsidies, and fares are relatively low compared to other countries in
the region.
Union leaders blamed what they called a history of failure to invest
in maintaining or replacing trains.
The Trains of Buenos Aires company promotes its low fares on its
website, saying that passengers pay just 23 cents a ride on average, compared
to 80 cents in Santiago, Chile, and $1.11 in Sao Paulo.
But the TBA also complained that without higher fares, it has
struggled to maintain the trains Employee salaries and benefits have soared
nearly 900 percent in the last decade, while the TBA now spends just 12 percent
of its operating costs on maintenance.
The company offered its condolences in a statement that said it was
cooperating with authorities investigating the cause of the accident.
"This is not an accident whose causes will be hidden from view in
any way," Schiavi promised, noting that recorders, security cameras,
computer systems and other evidence would be handed to investigators.
"We have a lot of evidence that will show the cause of this
accident," he said.
There have been a half-dozen serious train accidents in Argentina in
the last 15 months. Last September, a bus driver crossed the tracks in front of
an oncoming train, killing 11 people. Two months later, a bus driver
transporting children on a field trip drove in front of a train, killing eight
schoolgirls.
"The series of train accidents hurts, and exposes the reality of
a state incapable of controlling and acting to protect the passengers,"
opposition leader Ricardo Alfonsin tweeted.