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Deadly Train Wreck at English Countryside!--CUMBRIA/complete article LAMBRIGG, England

 
Jammer
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02/25/2007 06:24 AM
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Deadly Train Wreck at English Countryside!--CUMBRIA/complete article LAMBRIGG, England
Investigators combed the wreckage of a high-speed train crash in the remote countryside of northern England Saturday, after one commuter died and five were seriously injured when the London to Scotland service derailed. (Feb. 24)

Associated Press Video:

[link to video.ap.org]
Your VILLAGE called, their IDIOT is missing.

Your IDIOT called, their VILLAGE is missing.
Anonymous Coward
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02/25/2007 06:32 AM
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Re: Deadly Train Wreck at English Countryside!--CUMBRIA/complete article LAMBRIGG, England
This was really a plot by Rupert Murdoch to put Branson out of business.
Jammer  (OP)

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02/25/2007 06:34 AM
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Re: Deadly Train Wreck at English Countryside!--CUMBRIA/complete article LAMBRIGG, England
Really?

Do you have a link? lol

This was really a plot by Rupert Murdoch to put Branson out of business.
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 199951

Your VILLAGE called, their IDIOT is missing.

Your IDIOT called, their VILLAGE is missing.
Jammer  (OP)

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02/25/2007 07:05 AM
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Re: Deadly Train Wreck at English Countryside!--CUMBRIA/complete article LAMBRIGG, England
Investigators Inspect Tracks After Fatal U.K. Train Wreck
Saturday, February 24, 2007

LAMBRIGG, England — Investigators were examining rail tracks on Saturday as the possible cause of a high-speed commuter train crash in northern England which killed one passenger and sent carriages hurtling down an embankment.

A total of 77 passengers were injured, five of them seriously, and investigators said they were surprised only one person had been killed.

The Glasgow-bound Virgin train, carrying 120 passengers and staff, crashed Friday night in remote countryside near Lambrigg in Cumbria, 270 miles northwest of London, in driving rain.

Virgin founder Sir Richard Branson visited the scene Saturday and said he had returned to Britain from a family holiday after being informed of the accident.

Branson said authorities told him the likely cause of the accident was a defective rail line.

Branson said the train — a new model introduced in 2003 — was "built like a tank" and said the carriages and most windows had remained intact.

"If it had been any of the old trains the injuries and fatalities would have been horrendous," he said.

Safety inspectors were investigating whether the train derailed because of a failure of railroad switches used to adjust track settings and alter a train's route, Ripley said. If left in the wrong position, the components can throw carriages off the track.

Officials were inspecting the train and track with particular focus on one set of switches, said Thomas Edwards, lead inspector for the Rail Accident Investigation Board.

Branson said driver Ian Black, a former police officer, had attempted to keep the train on the railroad tracks, refusing to abandon his cabin and seek shelter with passengers.

Black, who suffered serious neck injuries, had chosen not to "desert the bridge and deserves a lot of praise for that," Branson said. "He is a definitely a hero. In the sober light of day we will have to see if he can be recognized as such."

Branson said Black was able to move his fingers and his toes despite his neck injuries.

Ian Garnett, watch manager with Cumbria Fire and Rescue Service, said rescuers had struggled to find the scene Friday.

Rescue workers searched along muddy country lanes to locate the scene, finding local farmers had arrived ahead of them to help evacuate the injured. Royal Air Force helicopters were scrambled to transport the wounded to hospitals, police said.

"We are amazed that we didn't have more fatalities on the scene — we have been very fortunate. It is little short of a miracle," said Chief Superintendent Martyn Ripley, of the British Transport Police.

Margaret Masson, an 84-year-old Glasgow woman, died in hospital of her injuries, police said.

Morning light revealed the front two carriages of the Pendolino train, which has a special tilting mechanism that enables it to reach speeds of 125 mph, had been hurled off the track and down a verge. Seven other carriages snaked along a banking, with one twisted onto its side.

Cumbria Ambulance Service spokeswoman Claudine Shacklock said at least 77 people were injured. Virgin Trains spokesman Lee West said the train was traveling at 95 mph at the time of the derailment.

Twelve ambulances and five fire trucks responded, and the Royal Air Force dispatched three Sea King helicopters and two mountain rescue teams.

Vanessa Robinson, 25, from Perth, Australia, said she was thrown from the train through a smashed window when her carriage rolled upside down.

"I heard a sudden thump. I thought the train was going to catch fire and I thought I was going to die. I felt a bump which threw me against the wall of the carriage," said Robinson, who was traveling to Glasgow on holiday. She suffered cuts and bruises but was not hospitalized.

The area where the train derailed Friday has seen two accidents on its railway lines in the past four years.

One of the most serious rail accidents in Britain occurred in October 1999, when a train heading out of London's Paddington station went through a red light and crashed into an incoming high-speed train, killing 31 people. Around 400 people were injured in the accident, which was Britain's worst rail crash in 25 years.
Your VILLAGE called, their IDIOT is missing.

Your IDIOT called, their VILLAGE is missing.





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