Head-on train crash in Austria: 39 injured, 2 critical, no deaths reported

The head-on train crash in Austria’s capital Vienna injured 39, three of them seriously. No deaths were reported by Monday. One of the train’s drivers and one passenger are in critical condition reports BBC News on Jan. 21, 2013.

The head-on train crash happened when two commuter trains, known in Europe as “S-Bahnzüge,” were heading towards each other on the same track during Monday’s morning rush hour. Germany’s Sueddeutsche video report mentioned that the head-on train crash occurred around 8:45 a.m.

The train line in Vienna’s western Penzing district had been put under manual control after a technical defect according to Sarah Nettel, a spokesperson for Austrian railways.

According to Sarah Nettel, one of the two commuter trains involved in the head-on train crash “got permission to travel when it should not have.”

Immediately after the two trains had crashed head-on in Vienna, police, emergency fire trucks, and ambulance crews appeared at the scene to rescue the two trains’ passengers and “to cut people out of the wreckage.” Both commuter trains involved in the head-on collision “were crumpled.” It took almost two hours for rescue crews to evacuate both trains.

While the specific cause for the head-on train crash is under investigation, Sarah Nettel said that the main focus at the moment is with the passengers.

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Tina Burgess has lived in several countries in the world. Most of her family and friends still live in Germany and other countries including Italy, Mexico, India, the Philippines, Australia, and China. She studied for several years at the University of Heidelberg, Germany, and San Diego State...

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