Mexico subway train collision: Two subway trains collided between two stations Saturday in Mexico City, killing at least one person and injuring 41, authorities said. Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum said on her Twitter account that the accident happened on Line 3 of the capital’s Metro system, without specifying the cause of the crash between the Potrero and La Raza stations.
Family members wait for news about relatives who were injured when two subway trains collided, outside a subway station.
Rescue workers inspect rail lines after two subway trains collided, in Mexico City.
Sheinbaum said one woman was killed and 57 people injured, who were taken to seven hospitals. Four people were trapped in the wreckage for a time, including one train driver, who was reported in serious condition. Late in the afternoon, the mayor said 26 of the injured had been released.
Dozens of police and soldiers swarmed into the nearby subway stations, while ambulances and rescue teams arrived to treat the injured. Edgar Montiel, an electrician who was on one on the trains, said he felt lucky because he had decided at the last minute to enter the next-to-last car rather than the rearmost car, which was smashed up in the crash.
A subway passenger, injured when two subway trains collided, waits to be taken to a hospital, in Mexico City.
A subway passenger, injured when two subway trains collided, is taken on a stretcher to a waiting ambulance, outside the Raza station in Mexico City.
“The power went out to the subway and a lot of smoke began to come out that was suffocating us. We could not breathe well,” he said.
Montiel, who had his left arm and shoulder bandaged, said the occupants of his car had to wait about 30 minutes until paramedics arrived to tend to the injured and help everyone exit the car.
Rescue workers exit the Raza station where two subway trains collided, in Mexico City.
President laments fatal accident
In lamenting the accident, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said on his Twitter account that the federal government was supporting the city officials dealing with accident.
In May 2021, an elevated section of the subway system collapsed, causing 26 deaths and injuring nearly 100 people. An investigation blamed the structural failure on deficiencies in the construction process, and 10 former officials have been charged with homicide, injury and damage to property.The Mexico City subway system has 226.5 kilometers (141 miles) of track and 195 stations. It serves an average of 4.6 million passengers every day.
(With inputs from AP)
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