Europe South Asia Asia Pacific Americas Middle East Africa BBC Homepage World Service Education



Front Page

World

UK

UK Politics

Business

Sci/Tech

Health

Education

Sport

Entertainment

Talking Point
On Air
Feedback
Low Graphics
Help

Saturday, June 6, 1998 Published at 18:11 GMT 19:11 UK


World: Europe

Germany orders more tests on high-speed trains

Broken wheel: most likely cause of the accident

The German railway authorities have ordered further, more thorough tests on high-speed trains of the type involved in a crash last Wednesday which left 102 people dead.

Sixty of the first generation Inter City Express trains built in 1991 were taken out of service on Friday. As many as 15 were returned to service after a routine inspection, but the second round of tests was called after it emerged that there had been no ultrasound examination of the wheels.


[ image: Rescuers have been working around the clock to find the victims]
Rescuers have been working around the clock to find the victims
"In order to rule out any further risks to the public we have decided to immediately call in all the ICE trains of this type for an additional ultrasound investigation," said Johannes Ludewig, the chairman of German Railways.

Investigators have identified a broken train wheel as the most likely cause of the accident at Eschede in north Germany, when a train smashed into a bridge. Parts of a wheel were found 6km (4m) ahead of the bridge.

"There are strong indications that this damaged wheel played a part. So we want to act now and carry out these tests and not wait until the final report," Mr Ludewig said.

Road bridge collapsed

Evidence has suggested that a wheel, which could have broken from material fatigue, may have caused the carriage directly behind the locomotive to derail.

The Hamburg-bound train was travelling at 200km/h (120mph) when the locomotive uncoupled from the train, which then hurtled into a road bridge as the carriages behind jack-knifed into one another.

The road bridge collapsed on several carriages, crushing the passengers inside.

Five more bodies

The search for victims was supposed to end on Saturday, but rescuers found four more bodies overnight in the debris. Police delayed their investigation into the cause of the accident to let rescuers search for more victims.

"We were surprised to find another body under the remnants of a train carriage," a rescue spokesman said. "As a result we have temporarily suspended the criminal investigation to continue the search for more victims."

Although no more victims are believed to be left in the wreckage, rescue workers are still toiling at the scene.

"They are searching the sand shovel by shovel and are even sifting the sand," said Klaus Rathert, the head of the rescue operation.





Advanced options | Search tips




Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage | ©




Africa | Americas | Asia-Pacific | Europe | Middle East | South Asia


Relevant Stories

05 Jun 98 | Europe
New theory for German train disaster

04 Jun 98 | Europe
Opinion: 'Accident must be seen in context'

04 Jun 98 | Europe
'Everybody closed their eyes in disbelief'

03 Jun 98 | Europe
The ICE train - pride of Germany's railways

04 Jun 98 | Europe
'Death came at 10:59'

04 Jun 98 | Europe
Pictures from the crash scene

03 Jun 98 | Europe
Eschede disaster the worst for decades





Internet Links

German Railways press statement (in German)

Die Welt (German newspaper)

Railway Gazette International - News


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.




In this section

Violence greets Clinton visit

Russian forces pound Grozny

EU fraud: a billion dollar bill

Next steps for peace

Cardinal may face loan-shark charges

From Business
Vodafone takeover battle heats up

Trans-Turkish pipeline deal signed

French party seeks new leader

Jube tube debut

Athens riots for Clinton visit

UN envoy discusses Chechnya in Moscow

Solana new Western European Union chief

Moldova's PM-designate withdraws

Chechen government welcomes summit

In pictures: Clinton's violent welcome

Georgia protests over Russian 'attack'

UN chief: No Chechen 'catastrophe'

New arms control treaty for Europe

From Business
Mannesmann fights back

EU fraud -- a billion-dollar bill

New moves in Spain's terror scandal

EU allows labelling of British beef

UN seeks more security in Chechnya

Athens riots for Clinton visit

Russia's media war over Chechnya

Homeless suffer as quake toll rises

Analysis: East-West relations must shift