At least 18 injured, five critically, in train crash in Denmark

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Two commuter trains collided head-on near the Danish capital early on Thursday leaving 18 people injured, five critically, officials said.

Police were unable to provide information about the cause of the accident, which occurred near a level crossing in a rural wooded area near the town of Hillerod, about 40 kilometres north of Copenhagen.

“Eighteen people have been injured in the accident. Of these, five are currently considered to be in critical condition,” police said in a statement, citing health authorities.

The yellow and grey locomotives of the two trains could be seen smashed and buckled in, the glass from their windshields and windows shattered. Both trains and their carriages remained upright on the rails.

Police said that 37 passengers were riding on the two trains and that they were alerted to the crash at around 6:29 am.

A large number of ambulances and police cars were dispatched and all the passengers were evacuated and the injured transported to hospitals.

The mayor of Gribskov municipality, Trine Egetved, said on Facebook that some of the injured were flown to hospital by helicopter.

The municipality of Hillerod set up a crisis centre for uninjured passengers and their relatives.

“21 people came to the crisis centre, most of them were on the train coming from the north and were on their way to work,” Michael Jorgen Pedersen, preparedness coordinator for the municipality, said, adding that the people arriving had been “shaken.”

Red Cross volunteer Christian Kraul Jensen told the AFP news agency they had been given coffee and a “psychological debriefing.”

“Meaning they were debriefed by retelling the situation and only describing how they felt and what happened,” Jensen said.

Human error

Emergency crews wound up their rescue efforts around three hours after the accident, as investigators continued their work at the scene.

“We can’t provide any details for now about the cause,” police official Morten Kaare Pedersen told reporters.

“We are in the process of gathering the necessary information about the course of events. So there are, and will continue to be for quite some time, a lot of investigations underway.”

Damm-Hejmdal said the number of critically injured “could change” over the course of the day.

The number “is obviously dynamic and could change. But that is the status as of now,” he told a press conference almost four hours after the accident.

“Initially it is difficult to get an overview of the exact injuries,” he said.

“You can imagine two trains colliding. That causes a lot of different injuries, people get thrown around.”

Kristian Madsen, an expert on railways with the Danish union IDA, told AFP he believed the accident was likely due to human error.

“It could be that the locomotive driver hadn’t seen that the signal was on red and then continued driving…The other thing it could be is that the station master who is responsible for the signalling on the station had given the train a green signal,” Madsen said.

The expert explained that the area still used an “old signal system.”

Denmark prides itself on its safety record but a 2019 train crash left eight dead and 16 injured while in August last year, an express train hit a farm truck on a crossing, killing one person and injuring 27.

Additional sources • AFP

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