BEIJING (AP) — A bullet train  crashed into another high-speed train that had stalled after being  struck by lightning in eastern China, causing four carriages to fall off  a viaduct and killing at least 35 people and injuring 191 others, state  media and an official said Sunday.It was the first derailment on China's  high-speed rail network since the country launched bullet trains in  2007 with a top speed of 155 miles (250 kilometers) per hour, the China  Daily reported.
The first train  was traveling south from the Zhejiang provincial capital of Hangzhou  when it lost power in the lightning strike and was hit from behind by  the second train in Wenzhou city at 8:27 p.m. (1230 GMT) Saturday, the  official Xinhua News Agency said. The second train had left Beijing and  both trains were destined for Fuzhou in eastern Fujian province.The  Ministry of Railways said in a statement that the first four carriages  of the moving train and the last two carriages of the stalled train  derailed.
An official in the  Zhejiang provincial emergency office told The Associated Press that 35  people had died, including one foreign female. He said her nationality  was not clear. A further 191 people were being treated at hospitals,  said the official, who gave only his surname, Hua, as is common with  Chinese officials.
Early Sunday, Chinese President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao  called for an all-out effort to rescue passengers still trapped in the  wreckage hours after the collision, Xinhua said. China Central  Television later said the search-and-rescue operation had ended by 4  a.m. Sunday.
A preliminary  investigation by the Zhejiang provincial government showed that four  coaches of the moving train fell off the viaduct, Xinhua said. The cars  plunged about 65 to 100 feet (20 to 30 meters) from the elevated section  of track, it said.
Photos taken  at the scene showed one badly damaged car lying on its side by the  viaduct and another car leaning against the viaduct after landing on its  end.
Xinhua quoted an  unidentified witness as saying, "Rescuers have dragged many passengers  out of the coach that fell on the ground."
The Wenzhou city government said more than 1,000 people participated in the rescue operation.
About  1,500 passengers were taken to a middle school, and more than 500  residents had given blood by 9 a.m. Sunday after appeals from the local  blood bank, which said many of the injured needed transfusions, CCTV  reported.
It was China's worst  train accident since April 2008, when a train traveling from Beijing to  the eastern coastal city of Qingdao derailed and crashed into another  train, leaving 72 people dead and another 416 injured.
Minister of Railways Sheng Guangzu, who rushed to the scene, ordered an in-depth investigation of Saturday's accident.More...

7/23/2011 10:14:00 PM
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