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60 injured in Amsterdam two-train crash: police

Last Updated 04 May 2018, 06:01 IST

Two trains collided head-on just outside Amsterdam, injuring at least 60 people, up to 20 of them seriously, Dutch transport police said.

"There are 60 people injured -- some 15 to 20 badly," police spokesman Ed Kraszewski told AFP yesterday, after the crash near Sloterdijk in the western suburbs of Amsterdam, but he added "I can't give exact figures."

A spokeswoman for the Dutch capital's fire service put the number of seriously injured at 56, adding "tens of others were slightly wounded."

The accident happened at around 6.30 pm (2200 IST) yesterday when a local train leaving Amsterdam hit a high-speed train, Dutch rail network Prorail spokeswoman Babet Verstappen told AFP.

But both trains were travelling relatively slowly at the time, Dutch NOS television reported: each moving at around 50 kilometres-an-hour.

One had just left Amsterdam central station; the other Amsterdam Sloterdijk. Witnesses quoted by the Dutch media television said the impact had not been violent.

Emergency personnel treated some of the wounded at the scene, on a bridge between Sloterdijk and Amsterdam Central Station, Verstappen added.

The worst injured were taken to hospitals, while less seriously hurt passengers were booked into hotels in the city, she added.

Many of the injured suffered from broken bones and bruising, Dutch news agency ANP reported.

It cited witnesses who described how travellers had been thrown about inside the carriages or up against their windows, some of which had shattered.

Witnesses said they heard a long hoot from one of the trains before the crash.

Passengers on the social network Twitter said they were "smashed against the trains' frames" or "thrown from their seats", ANP added.

Pictures from the scene showed the crushed front ends of both the trains and smashed windows in some of the carriages.

"Some of the injured had to be rescued from inside the train," added Amsterdam fire service spokeswoman Elke van den Hout.

By late yesterday evening, all the injured had been rescued from the trains, which remained on the tracks, railway police spokesman Kraszewski said.

The cause of the accident remained unknown, but police have launched an investigation, he added.

The crash has shut down rail traffic in the west of the city, including Amsterdam Central station and the service to Schiphol airport, Prorail's Verstappen said.

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(Published 22 April 2012, 13:38 IST)

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