Argentina reels after 50 killed in train crash

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Desperate families were searching for loved ones Thursday after a massive train crash in Buenos Aires killed 50 people, injured nearly 700 and left dozens trapped for hours in the wreckage. Rescuers spent much of the day prying people from the wreckage after the packed train slammed into a wall at a major railway terminus Wednesday morning, sending cars crashing into each other and crushing the passengers inside. “The train was full and the impact was tremendous,” a passenger identified only as Ezequiel told local television, adding that medics at the scene appeared overwhelmed by the scale of the disaster.
Officials late Wednesday raised the death toll to 50, including one child. Civil defense officials earlier said that at least 675 people had been hurt in the crash, 200 of them seriously. Families of missing passengers desperately searched hospitals, the morgue and a public cemetery where dozens of bodies were taken. Authorities handed out lists of hundreds of the injured, but the identities of many of the deceased and wounded remained unknown. “I was in five hospitals and I couldn’t find my wife,” said a man who gave his name as Jose and said his pregnant wife had been in one of the first cars.
“They told us there are people being operated on and they don’t know who they are. There’s no way to know until they come out of surgery,” said Luisa, looking for her 24-year-old son.
TV channels broadcast photographs of missing people as social networks filled with messages from people searching for information. Witnesses said the train’s brakes failed as it was arriving at the Once station on the western outskirts of Argentina’s capital. Survivors described a scene of panic, with Medevac helicopters and ambulances racing in and out of the station to ferry the wounded to hospitals. “There were people who were crushed and shouting desperately. I saw bodies and blood all over the place,” said passenger Alejandro Velazquez.
Firefighters and rescue workers had to break through skylights in the train’s roofs to reach dozens of people who were trapped in the twisted wreckage of the first and second carriages. The government called for two days of mourning and suspended Carnival celebrations, including a massive parade planned in Buenos Aires on Friday.