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Germany train crash leaves at least 9 dead, injures 150

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    Hector Mata/AP Photo

    On Sept. 12, 2008, a Metrolink Commuter Train collided with an oncoming freight train after failing to stop at a red light near Chatsworth, California. The deadly crash killed 25 people on board and injured another 135 on board the train. Investigators later revealed that the train's engineer had been texting while driving and sent his last message only seconds before the crash.

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    Chris Carlson/AP Photo

    On Jan. 26, 2005, a Metrolink Commuter Train collided with an abandoned vehicle on the tracks causing it to derail and strike two other trains on either side of it - one stationary freight train and one Metrolink train heading north. The chain-reaction of collisions caused 11 deaths and nearly 200 injuries in the Glendale, California accident. It was later revealed that the man that left his car on the tracks was planning suicide but didn't follow through. He was ultimately convicted of 11 counts of murder and sentenced to 11 consecutive life sentences in prison with no possibility of parole.

  • Rescue forces work at the site where two trains collided...

    Josef Reisner/AP

    Rescue forces work at the site where two trains collided head-on.

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    Early in the morning on Jan. 6, 2005, two Norfolk Southern freight trains collided in Graniteville, South Carolina. One freight train carrying chlorine gas, sodium hydroxide and cresol impacted with a parked freight train resulting in the deaths of nine people. An additional 250 people were treated for chlorine exposure while 5,400 residents in the area were forced to evacuate for nearly two weeks while HAZMAT teams decontaminated the area.

  • On Dec. 1, 2013, a Metro-North Railroad train derailed in...

    Edwin Valero/AP Photo

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  • On Feb. 16, 1996, a MARC commuter train collided with...

    Doug Mill/AP Photo

    On Feb. 16, 1996, a MARC commuter train collided with an Amtrak train in Silver Spring, Maryland killing three crew members and eight passengers on board the MARC train. An additional 11 people on the MARC train and 15 on the Amtrak train were injured in the collision. The accident was revealed to be caused by the MARC train who had forgotten the indication of an approach signal and in turn could not slowdown in time after encountering a stop signal.

  • The axis sits separated from the carriage at the site...

    Josef Reisner/AP

    The axis sits separated from the carriage at the site of the crash.

  • On Feb. 4, 2015, a Metro-North Railroad train traveling to...

    Seth Wenig/AP Photo

    On Feb. 4, 2015, a Metro-North Railroad train traveling to Grand Central Station in Manhattan collides with an SUV stopped on the railroad tracks in Valhalla, N.Y. The deadly accident resulted in the death of the driver and five other people on board the train. About 15 people were injured while seven of them were "in very serious condition." The accident was the deadliest in Metro-North's history as the front half of the train went up in flames.

  • At least nine people have been killed and 150 injured...

    PETER KNEFFEL/AFP/Getty Images

    At least nine people have been killed and 150 injured in the train accident near Bad Aibling, southern Germany, early Tuesday.

  • On May 13, 2015, Amtrak Northeast Regional Train 188 was...

    Win McNamee/Getty Images

    On May 13, 2015, Amtrak Northeast Regional Train 188 was moving through Philadelphia, Pennsylvania when the engine and all seven passenger cars skidded off the rails killing seven people and injuring more than 200 others. The train was traveling from Washington to Penn Station in Manhattan with 238 passengers on board. It was later revealed that the train was doing more than double the 50 mph limit before it derailed when going around a sharp curve.

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    Uwe Lein/AP

    An injured person is rushed away from the scene by emergency personnel.

  • On March 16, 1999, an Amtrak train collided with a...

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    On March 16, 1999, an Amtrak train collided with a semi-truck on the tracks causing it to derail. The accident happened near Bourbonnais, Illinois killing 11 people and injuring 100 more in the process. Nearly the entire train derailed and piled up into one big mess as seen in this photo.

  • On Sept. 22, 1993, one of the deadliest accidents in...

    Mark Foley/AP Photo

    On Sept. 22, 1993, one of the deadliest accidents in Amtrak history came out of Mobile, Alabama. A large barge had rammed into the CSXT Big Bayou Canot bridge causing it to come out of alignment and into the path of an oncoming train. The Amtrak train traveling from Los Angeles to Miami with 220 passengers on board derailed where the track has been kinked from the earlier incident. The entire front end of the train submerged into the water ultimately killing 47 people and injuring 103 others, primarily from drowning.

  • On April 19, 2002, an Amtrak train passing through Crescent...

    Oscar Sosa/AP Photo

    On April 19, 2002, an Amtrak train passing through Crescent City, Florida derailed causing the death of four people and 142 injuries. The National Transportation Safety Board later revealed that the accident was caused by a hot weather "sun kink" misalignment of the tracks due to improper maintenance of the tracks.

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New York Daily News
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

BAD AIBLING, Germany — Two commuter trains crashed head-on Tuesday morning in a remote area in southern Germany, killing at least nine people and injuring some 150, some of whom had to be cut out of the wreckage and transported across a river for medical care, police said.

The two regional trains crashed before 7 a.m. on the single line that runs near Bad Aibling, in Bavaria, and that several wagons overturned, police spokesman Stefan Sonntag told The Associated Press. Fifty of those hurt have serious injuries, he added.

It took hours to reach some of the injured in the wreckage and authorities were still working at midday to remove the final body from the train.

“Once that is done then the investigators can begin their work,” federal police spokesman Rainer Scharf told the AP from the scene.

At least nine people have been killed and 150 injured in the train accident near Bad Aibling, southern Germany, early Tuesday.
At least nine people have been killed and 150 injured in the train accident near Bad Aibling, southern Germany, early Tuesday.

The rail line is commonly used by commuters heading to work in Munich, and would normally also carry children traveling to school, but they are currently on holiday, the dpa news agency reported.

It was not clear how fast the trains were traveling at the time of the crash but German rail operator Deutsche Bahn told dpa they were permitted to travel of speeds up to 80 mph on that stretch of track.

The trains crashed in a remote area about 40 miles southeast of Munich in an area with a forest on one side and a river on the other. Rescue crews using helicopters and small boats shuttled injured passengers to the other side of the Mangfall river to waiting ambulances. Authorities said they were being taken to hospitals across southern Bavaria.

Hundreds of emergency personnel from Germany and neighboring Austria were on the scene looking through the wreckage and aiding in the evacuation of the injured.

“This is the biggest accident we have had in years in this region and we have many emergency doctors, ambulances and helicopters on the scene,” Sonntag said.

The two trains from the so-called Meridian line were both partially derailed and wedged against one another, train operater Bayerische Oberlandbahn said in a statement on its website.

Rescue forces work at the site where two trains collided head-on.
Rescue forces work at the site where two trains collided head-on.

It was not yet clear what caused the crash, police said.

Federal Transport Minister Alexander Dobrindt, speaking from the crash scene, said his thoughts were with the family members of the dead and the injured.

“We need to find out know what happened, if the cause of the crash was based on the technology or human failure,” he said.

The axis sits separated from the carriage at the site of the crash.
The axis sits separated from the carriage at the site of the crash.

Bayerische Oberlandbahn said it had started a hotline for family and friends to check on passengers.

“This is a huge shock. We are doing everything to help the passengers, relatives and employees,” Bernd Rosenbusch, the head of the Bayerische Oberlandbahn, told dpa.

In Munich, the city blood center put out an urgent call for donors in the wake of the crash.

An injured person is rushed away from the scene by emergency personnel.
An injured person is rushed away from the scene by emergency personnel.

The Munich Blood Donation Service, which delivers blood products to local hospitals, said on its website that there was “an acute increased need for life-saving blood products” after the accident and called for immediate donations.

Germany is known for the quality of its train service but the country has seen several other accidents, typically at road crossings.

Most recently, a train driver and one passenger were killed when a train hit the trailer of a tractor in western Germany in May, injuring another 20.

In 2011, 10 people were killed and 23 injured in a head-on collision of a passenger train and a cargo train on a single-line track close to Saxony-Anhalt’s state capital Magdeburg in eastern Germany.

Germany’s worst train accident happened in 1998, when a high-speed ICE train crashed in the northern German town of Eschede, killing 101 people and injuring more than 80.