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At Least 7 Killed as Train Derails Outside Paris At Least 6 Killed as Train Derails Outside Paris
(about 3 hours later)
BRÉTIGNY-SUR-ORGE, France — A crowded passenger train derailed at a station here Friday evening, killing at least seven people and injuring dozens of others, France’s interior minister said. It was the country’s worst train accident in 25 years. BRÉTIGNY-SUR-ORGE, France — A crowded passenger train derailed at a station here Friday evening, killing at least six people and injuring dozens of others, France’s interior minister said. It was the country’s worst train accident in 25 years.
The train, heading from Paris to Limoges, derailed here, about 20 miles south of Paris, and split into two. Witnesses said that the intercity train — not one of France’s TGV express services — appeared to be going unusually fast and veered off the track as it entered the station, where it was not scheduled to stop. Cars smashed into one another and some overturned. The train, heading to Limoges from Paris, derailed here, about 20 miles south of Paris, and split in two. Witnesses said that the intercity train — not one of France’s TGV express services — appeared to be going unusually fast and veered off the track as it entered the station, where it was not scheduled to stop. Cars smashed into one another, and some overturned.
“The death toll is evolving constantly at this point, and unfortunately it will probably rise,” said Manuel Valls, the interior minister. “At this stage, there are seven people dead, several dozen wounded, and some of them are serious.” “The death toll is evolving constantly at this point, and unfortunately, it will probably rise,” said Manuel Valls, the interior minister. On Friday night, the Interior Ministry confirmed that a dozen people had been seriously wounded. Nine of them were in critical condition, 22 had significant injuries and more than 200 were treated by emergency personnel.
Michel Fuzeau, the local police chief, said a dozen people were seriously wounded, nine of them very seriously. Guillaume Pepy, the president of the French national railway company, SNCF, said at least 370 people were on the train, many of them heading home for a holiday weekend or to central France for summer vacations. The national holiday of Bastille Day is on Sunday.
Guillaume Pepy, the president of the French national railway company, SNCF, said at least 370 people were on the train, many of them heading home for a holiday weekend or to central France for summer vacations. The annual national holiday of Bastille Day is on Sunday.
The train’s third and fourth cars derailed first, then knocked four other cars off the track, Mr. Pepy told reporters, his voice breaking. “Some cars simply derailed, others are leaning, others fell over,” he said. But he said there was no immediately obvious cause for the derailment.The train’s third and fourth cars derailed first, then knocked four other cars off the track, Mr. Pepy told reporters, his voice breaking. “Some cars simply derailed, others are leaning, others fell over,” he said. But he said there was no immediately obvious cause for the derailment.
The accident took place at 5:14 p.m., the SNCF said, not long after the train, Intercités No. 3657, left the Paris station of Gare d’Austerlitz. Some people were still trapped in the train more than two hours later, Mr. Pepy said. The accident took place at 5:14 p.m., the SNCF said, 21 minutes after the train, Intercités No. 3657, left the Paris station of Gare d’Austerlitz. Some people were still trapped in the train more than two hours later, Mr. Pepy said.
Pictures on television showed one of the carriages smashed against a platform at Brétigny-sur-Orge station as rescue workers helped passengers to safety. Television images showed one of the carriages smashed against a platform at Brétigny-sur-Orge station as rescue workers helped passengers to safety.
“Everyone is running in every direction. There is panic,” the town’s mayor, Bernard Decaux, told the newspaper Le Parisien. “It is an apocalyptic scene. We are trying to organize things.” One passenger, Marc Cheutin, 57, told Agence France-Presse that he had to “step over a decapitated person” to exit the carriage he had been traveling in. “Shortly after departure, just as I was getting into my book, we felt a first shock that shook the carriage I was in,” he said. “Then there was a second shock and the carriage lifted up, then a third and a fourth and the carriage went over on its side.”
He said that three cars had smashed into one another, while another was lying on its side nearby, its top split open. Photos of the scene showed that one car had mounted the passenger platform, dislodging part of the roof. Vianey Kalisa, 30, who was waiting at the station for a train into Paris, told the news agency, “I saw many wounded, women and children trapped in the interior.”
“I trembled like a child,” he said. “People cried. A man’s face was covered in blood. These are the images of war. I’ll never forget it.”
Bernard Villaret, 65, an engineer on another train stopped opposite the crash, said, “We saw people with blood stains on their clothes, people who got out of the train with wounds still bleeding and scratches, they were pale and slightly crazed.”
But he was impressed by the atmosphere, he said. “You could see that those people were resisting as much as they could; they didn’t panic.”
Mayor Bernard Decaux told the newspaper Le Parisien that there was chaos at the station after the accident. “Everyone is running in every direction,” he said. “It is an apocalyptic scene. We are trying to organize things.” He said that three cars had smashed into one another, while another was lying on its side nearby, its top split open. Photographs of the scene showed that one car had mounted the passenger platform, dislodging part of the roof.
Dozens of emergency and police vehicles rushed to the scene, and hospitals in the southern Paris region were put on alert.Dozens of emergency and police vehicles rushed to the scene, and hospitals in the southern Paris region were put on alert.
President François Hollande headed to the scene when the seriousness of the accident became clear. President François Hollande headed to the scene when the seriousness of the accident became clear. He promised a thorough investigation.
“Most of the people who suffered minor injuries have been taken care of,” said a local lawmaker, Michel Pouzol. “We are going to have to empty the carriages completely to see if there are victims or not.” “A catastrophe has taken place,” he told reporters at the scene, adding that the station would be closed for three days.
The train was traveling on part of the track used by the busy suburban railway, the RER C. Jérôme Guedj, the president of the regional council, told reporters that the crash scene had moved him, to see “this train cut in half and the carriages torn to bits, the violence of the crash.”
The train was traveling on part of the track used by the suburban railway, the RER C, which is used heavily and has needed much recent repair work to try to eliminate commuter delays into Paris.
The derailment was France’s worst rail accident since a commuter train crashed into a stationary train at the Gare de Lyon terminal in Paris in 1988, killing 56 people.

Maïa de la Baume reported from Brétigny-sur-Orge, and Steven Erlanger from Paris.

Maïa de la Baume reported from Brétigny-sur-Orge, and Steven Erlanger from Paris.