2 Train Drivers Killed, 30 Injured in High-speed Rail Crash in Italy
2 Train Drivers Killed, 30 Injured in High-speed Rail Crash in Italy
A senior official said none of the injuries suffered were life-threatening and all casualties had been taken to hospital. The Lombardy region's health department put the number of injured at 31.

Lodi: Two rail workers were killed and about 30 people injured on Thursday when a high-speed train derailed before dawn near Milan in northern Italy, authorities said.

The crash occurred just after 5:30 am (4:30 GMT) near the town of Lodi, about 50 km south of Milan.

"It was a serious accident that had a tragic end with the death of two rail workers" aboard the train, said Lodi Prefect Marcello Cardona, adding that an investigation was underway.

Cardona said none of the injuries suffered were life-threatening and all casualties had been taken to hospital. The Lombardy region's health department put the number of injured at 31.

"It could have been a lot worse," Cardona said, adding there were 33 people on board the train. Only one person was in the first car and two people in the second when the accident occurred, he said.

"I thought I was dead," a survivor told local newspaper Liberta from hospital in Piacenza where he was being treated for minor injuries. "I closed my eyes and prayed."

"The train was going very fast, perhaps 300 km per hour," said the unnamed man in his 20s.

"Suddenly, I felt a violent blow. A really loud roar," said the man who was travelling with a friend in the second carriage.

"We held hands tightly to avoid falling. The wagon overturned and while waiting for help we went out through a hole to save ourselves," he said, adding they were stuck on the crashed train for 15 minutes.

The interior minister has been informed and the prosecutor was already at the scene of the accident, the cause of which was unknown, he said. Two helicopters, hundreds of firemen, police and other authorities descended on the open farmland area outside of Lodi.

"We are greatly saddened by the two deaths, the two rail workers, and we express our solidarity with the families," said Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte.

"We can't yet say anything" about the cause of the crash, he told journalists in Rome.

Ripped metal

The Milan-Salerno train was en route to Bologna when it came off the tracks before dawn.

Video images showed ripped metal at the front of the first car, where the engine separated from the train. The first car was flipped on its side and appeared to be still attached to the rest of the train.

The engine car could be seen resting on its side on the other side of a nearby railway building several dozen metres away.

According to initial findings reported by the media, the engine went off the rails and struck a freight wagon on a parallel track before hitting the building.

Italian media reported that work had been done on the track on Wednesday night, but Cardona said it was premature to jump to conclusions on a link between that work and the accident.

"Line maintenance is done continually and it's much too early to associate the accident to maintenance," he said.

Italy's last serious train accident occurred in January 2018, when three women died and about 100 passengers were injured when a packed train derailed near Milan due to poor track maintenance.

Managers and employees of Italy's state railway, RFI, as well as two former members of the national railway safety agency were charged with negligent homicide and other crimes.

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