2005 Phú Lộc derailment

2005 Phú Lộc derailment
Location within Vietnam
Date 12 March 2005
Time 11:50 AM
Location Phú Lộc, Thừa Thiên–Huế
Coordinates 16°12′00″N 108°07′59″E / 16.2°N 108.133°E / 16.2; 108.133
Country Vietnam
Rail line North–South Railway
Operator Vietnam Railways
Type of incident Derailment
Cause Speeding
Statistics
Trains 1
Deaths 11[1]
Injuries 200[1]
Route map
Legend
To Hanoi
688 Huế
742 Thua Luu
↓ Direction of train

Derailment site
755 Lăng Cô
Thừa Thiên–HuếDa Nang border
Hải Vân Pass
791 Da Nang
To Ho Chi Minh City

The 2005 Phú Lộc derailment was an accident to an express passenger train that derailed in central Vietnam on 12 March 2005[1] when it was running on the North–South Railway, killing 11 people and injuring hundreds, many of which were in a serious condition after the crash. The accident occurred in Phú Lộc District, Thừa Thiên–Huế Province as the train was traveling from Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City.[2] The accident was described as "the most tragic rail accident in Vietnam in the past 30 years",[3] and "the country's worst-ever rail accident".[4]

Incident

The train was heading from Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City when eight of the train's 13 cars toppled from the tracks near the Hải Vân mountain pass. The accident occurred at 11:50 am near Da Ban hamlet, at kilometre 752(+500) of the North–South Railway, approximately 3 km west of Lăng Cô station, Phú Lộc District, Thừa Thiên–Huế Province, and 8 km from the northern section of the Hải Vân Pass.[4] Some 500 passengers and 29 crew members were aboard the train; of these, at least 11 were killed and 200 injured.[1] Six people reportedly died at the scene, while five more died of their injuries after the fact.[2] The Chinese People's Daily reported that 70 people had been "severely injured". The accident blocked traffic along the single-track North-South Railway for 26 hours while rescue and clean-up efforts proceeded.[3]

A probe by the Vietnamese police department found that the train was travelling at a speed of 68 km/h (42 mph) when it derailed, or 20 km/h more than the stipulated speed limit of 40 km/h (25 mph).[3] Witnesses reported that the train was travelling at a high speed at the time of the incident, with one passenger claiming that the train had been "gathering speed" just before the derailment. The train was reportedly 20 minutes behind schedule at the time.[4]

Due to the lack of road access to the accident site, rescuers were forced to reach the site by boat, mobilizing several boats and canoes to transport injured passengers to Route 1A, where they were transported to local hospitals, including Phú Lộc District Hospital, Hue Central Hospital, and Polyclinic Hospital (Bệnh viện đa khoa) in Da Nang.[1][4]

See also

Notes and references

External links

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