<p>An elevated metro line collapsed in the Mexican capital on Monday, leaving at least 23 people dead and dozens injured as a train came plunging down, authorities said.</p>.<p>Carriages were seen hanging from the overpass in a tangle of twisted cables with the ends pointing towards the ground in a V-shape.</p>.<p>"Unfortunately there are 23 deceased," including minors, Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum told reporters at the scene in the south of the capital.</p>.<p>Around 65 others received hospital treatment following the dramatic accident, one of the worst to strike the Mexico City metro since it was inaugurated in 1969.</p>.<p>Anxious relatives gathered at the site awaiting news of those believed to have been aboard the train.</p>.<p>Efrain Juarez said that his son was in the wreckage.</p>.<p>"My daughter-in-law called us. She was with him and she told us the structure fell down over them," he told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>Another man who did not give his name said that his brother was among those trapped.</p>.<p>"He came with his wife and they managed to get her out, but he was crushed there and we don't know anything," he said.</p>.<p>Dozens of emergency workers were seen trying to rescue victims from the carriages.</p>.<p>The work had to be suspended because of fears the wreckage was too unstable, but it later resumed with the help of a crane.</p>.<p>A car was trapped under the rubble, but a person inside managed to get out alive, she said.</p>.<p>The police, who brought rescue dogs, urged onlookers to move back in case of falling debris.</p>.<p>"Suddenly I saw that the structure was shaking," an unidentified witness told the Mexican television network Televisa.</p>.<p>"When the dust cleared we ran... to see if we could help. There were no screams. I don't know if they were in shock," she added.</p>.<p>Medics were seen taking the injured away on stretchers.</p>.<p>The casualties were rushed to different hospitals in the city, Sheinbaum said.</p>.<p>She promised a structural examination of the affected metro line, which will remain closed, and a full investigation into the causes of the accident.</p>.<p>"We will report the whole truth. Our support to all victims," Sheinbaum tweeted.</p>.<p>One man, Jose Martinez, told reporters that he had a miraculous escape because he was unable to leave work in time to catch the ill-fated train.</p>.<p>"I was saved by like 15 minutes. It's good that nothing happened to me," he said.</p>.<p>The Mexico City subway has 12 lines and carries millions of passengers each day.</p>.<p>Line 12, where the accident struck, was inaugurated in October 2012 by then mayor Marcelo Ebrard, who is now foreign minister.</p>.<p>Writing on Twitter, Ebrard offered his cooperation with the investigation to establish the causes and responsibility for what he called a "terrible tragedy."</p>.<p>Ricardo de la Torre, a Mexico City resident who lives close to Line 12, said that he had been worried about the quality of the overpass because the trains make nearby buildings shake.</p>.<p>"By that simple fact we know that the construction is bad," he said.</p>.<p>In one of the worst accidents on the network, two metro trains rammed into each other leaving 23 dead and 55 injured in October 1975.</p>.<p>Monday's incident comes just over a year after two subway trains collided in Mexico City, leaving one dead and around 40 injured as panicked passengers escaped through dense smoke.</p>.<p>In January of this year, one person died and 29 suffered smoke inhalation injuries in a fire in the metro's control centre.</p>.<p>The latest accident comes at a time when Mexico is struggling to cope with the coronavirus pandemic, which has left more than 217,000 people dead in the country -- one of the world's highest tolls.</p>
<p>An elevated metro line collapsed in the Mexican capital on Monday, leaving at least 23 people dead and dozens injured as a train came plunging down, authorities said.</p>.<p>Carriages were seen hanging from the overpass in a tangle of twisted cables with the ends pointing towards the ground in a V-shape.</p>.<p>"Unfortunately there are 23 deceased," including minors, Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum told reporters at the scene in the south of the capital.</p>.<p>Around 65 others received hospital treatment following the dramatic accident, one of the worst to strike the Mexico City metro since it was inaugurated in 1969.</p>.<p>Anxious relatives gathered at the site awaiting news of those believed to have been aboard the train.</p>.<p>Efrain Juarez said that his son was in the wreckage.</p>.<p>"My daughter-in-law called us. She was with him and she told us the structure fell down over them," he told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>Another man who did not give his name said that his brother was among those trapped.</p>.<p>"He came with his wife and they managed to get her out, but he was crushed there and we don't know anything," he said.</p>.<p>Dozens of emergency workers were seen trying to rescue victims from the carriages.</p>.<p>The work had to be suspended because of fears the wreckage was too unstable, but it later resumed with the help of a crane.</p>.<p>A car was trapped under the rubble, but a person inside managed to get out alive, she said.</p>.<p>The police, who brought rescue dogs, urged onlookers to move back in case of falling debris.</p>.<p>"Suddenly I saw that the structure was shaking," an unidentified witness told the Mexican television network Televisa.</p>.<p>"When the dust cleared we ran... to see if we could help. There were no screams. I don't know if they were in shock," she added.</p>.<p>Medics were seen taking the injured away on stretchers.</p>.<p>The casualties were rushed to different hospitals in the city, Sheinbaum said.</p>.<p>She promised a structural examination of the affected metro line, which will remain closed, and a full investigation into the causes of the accident.</p>.<p>"We will report the whole truth. Our support to all victims," Sheinbaum tweeted.</p>.<p>One man, Jose Martinez, told reporters that he had a miraculous escape because he was unable to leave work in time to catch the ill-fated train.</p>.<p>"I was saved by like 15 minutes. It's good that nothing happened to me," he said.</p>.<p>The Mexico City subway has 12 lines and carries millions of passengers each day.</p>.<p>Line 12, where the accident struck, was inaugurated in October 2012 by then mayor Marcelo Ebrard, who is now foreign minister.</p>.<p>Writing on Twitter, Ebrard offered his cooperation with the investigation to establish the causes and responsibility for what he called a "terrible tragedy."</p>.<p>Ricardo de la Torre, a Mexico City resident who lives close to Line 12, said that he had been worried about the quality of the overpass because the trains make nearby buildings shake.</p>.<p>"By that simple fact we know that the construction is bad," he said.</p>.<p>In one of the worst accidents on the network, two metro trains rammed into each other leaving 23 dead and 55 injured in October 1975.</p>.<p>Monday's incident comes just over a year after two subway trains collided in Mexico City, leaving one dead and around 40 injured as panicked passengers escaped through dense smoke.</p>.<p>In January of this year, one person died and 29 suffered smoke inhalation injuries in a fire in the metro's control centre.</p>.<p>The latest accident comes at a time when Mexico is struggling to cope with the coronavirus pandemic, which has left more than 217,000 people dead in the country -- one of the world's highest tolls.</p>