Spain derailment: Two official investigations launched - Los Angeles Times
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Spain derailment: Two official investigations launched

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LONDON – As the death toll rose to 78, Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy announced two separate investigations Thursday into a spectacular train derailment in northwest Spain, one of the worst railway disasters in the country’s history.

“We have lived through a terrible accident ... which I fear will remain in our memory for a long time,†Rajoy said near the site of Wednesday’s derailment. He added that Spain would observe three days of mourning.

In addition to the 78 dead, a tally that authorities fear may climb higher, about 140 people were reported injured in the incident near the Christian pilgrimage town of Santiago de Compostela, in Spain’s Galicia region.

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PHOTOS: Passenger train derailment kills dozens in Spain

Investigators are looking into driver error as a possible cause of the train leaping off the tracks at high speed. The Spanish Interior Ministry has ruled out terrorism, the Associated Press reported. An Al Qaeda-inspired bombing attack on the railway system in Madrid in 2004 killed nearly 200 people.

At least one passenger has spoken of rounding a curve much too fast when the accident occurred. The train, en route from Madrid to the port town of Ferrol, was not one of Spain’s high-speed services, although the tracks can be used by high-speed trains.

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Video footage showed carriages crumpled and lying on their side. Almost all those who perished were found dead on the scene, in an indication of the force of the derailment. A local official likened the scene to Dante’s “Inferno.â€

“For a native of Santiago like me, this is the saddest day,†Rajoy told reporters.

The town, which was on the eve of celebrating a major religious festival that attracts thousands of pilgrims from all over the world, canceled the event.

Rajoy said a judicial investigation into the tragedy would be launched, as well as an investigation by the government’s public works department.

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He also thanked residents for turning out to help rescue workers and the injured, and for lining up by the hundreds to donate blood.

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