Published • loading... • Updated
Train collides with crane arm in Spain's fourth rail accident in a week
The collision is Spain's fourth rail accident this week, injuring at least six people and raising concerns about safety protocols in railway infrastructure management.
- On Thursday, a commuter train collided with a construction crane in the Region of Murcia near Cartagena, halting services, Spanish rail operator Adif said.
- The crash came days after the Andalusia high-speed train collision that killed at least 43 people and followed the Adamuz collision and other incidents this week.
- State broadcaster TVE reported several people were hurt, including at least one seriously injured, while regional emergency services in Murcia said the train hasn't been overturned nor derailed; train line R1 is out of service as investigators check infrastructure after three derailments in 48 hours.
- Spain's biggest train drivers' union called a three-day nationwide strike and SEMAF demanded criminal liability from those responsible for ensuring safety in the railway infrastructure.
- Investigations are under way and it remains unclear how the crane obstructed the track, while wider infrastructure checks sweep the Spanish rail network amid Spain's recent crashes.
Insights by Ground AI
107 Articles
107 Articles
Spain: Third Railway Accident in Just Days Leaves Several Injured
Spain faced yet another railway accident on Thursday, January 22nd as a commuter train collided with a crane in the southeastern region of Murcia. Several passengers were lightly injured, according to state operator Renfe. The incident occurred in the municipality of Alumbres, and local emergency services confirmed the collision but did not provide a precise number of casualties. Renfe clarified that the train did not derail. Police and firefig…
Again a train accident occurred in Spain. A train crashed into a crane, several people were slightly injured. Meanwhile, the Federal Foreign Office apparently proceeds from a dead German in the accident of Sunday.
·Hamburg, Germany
Read Full ArticleCoverage Details
Total News Sources107
Leaning Left16Leaning Right20Center21Last UpdatedBias Distribution37% Center
Bias Distribution
- 37% of the sources are Center
37% Center
L 28%
C 37%
R 35%
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium



























