Kamis, 02 Maret 2023

Greece train crash: 57 people confirmed dead as public anger grows - BBC

Remains of destroyed train carriage being removed by crane on Thursday morningReuters

The death toll from Tuesday's train crash in Greece has increased to 57, a coroner has told the BBC.

Eleni Zaggelidou, one of ten coroners working on the investigation, said DNA had been taken from 57 intact bodies.

Meanwhile, a government minister said austerity during Greece's economic crisis in the 2000s contributed to a lack of investment in the railways.

Rail workers held a one-day strike on Thursday following the disaster, blaming government neglect.

More than 2,000 people protested for a second day in Athens and Thessaloniki, shocked by Tuesday's disaster near the city of Larissa.

"We are angry at the company, at the government and past governments that did nothing to improve conditions in the Greek railway," said pensioner Stavros Nantis in Athens.

Rescue workers are still going through burned and buckled carriages, searching for victims.

This was the "most difficult moment", rescuer Konstantinos Imanimidis told Reuters news agency, because "instead of saving lives, we have to recover bodies".

The crash happened just before midnight on Tuesday. A passenger train carrying 350 people collided with a freight train after both ended up on the same track - causing the front carriages to burst into flames.

Athens protest, 2 Mar 23
EPA

The railway workers' strike began at 0600 local time (0400 GMT), hitting national rail services and the subway in Athens.

Many in Greece see the crash as an accident waiting to happen, and the union blamed successive governments' "disrespect" towards Greek railways for leading to this "tragic result".

During a visit to a hospital where relatives of the missing had gathered, Zoe Rapti, Greece's Deputy Minister of Health, told the BBC that investing in the rail network had been made more difficult by the Greek debt crisis around 2010, which led to drastic austerity measures in exchange for a financial rescue by the European Union and International Monetary Fund.

"Of course, things should have been done during these years but, as you remember, Greece faced a big economic crisis for more than 10 years, which means that many things went back," she said.

She said a "wide investigation" would take place, which she promised would provide answers.

Larissa blood donation, 2 Mar 23
AFP

Government spokesman Giannis Oikonomous also said "chronic delays" in implementing rail projects were rooted in "distortions" in the country's public sector going back decades.

A 59-year-old station master in Larissa has been charged with manslaughter by negligence and is due to appear in court on Thursday. He has admitted to having a share of responsibility in the accident, his lawyer Stefanos Pantzartzidis said outside the courthouse.

"He is literally devastated. Since the first moment, he has assumed responsibility proportionate to him," Mr Pantzartzidis said, hinting that the station master, who has not been publicly named, was not the only one to blame.

Greece's Transport Minister Kostas Karamanlis resigned over the crash, saying he would take responsibility for the authorities' "longstanding failures" to fix a railway system that was not fit for the 21st Century.

But Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis's suggestion that "tragic human error" was to blame has caused anger.

On Wednesday, rioters clashed with police outside the headquarters of Hellenic Train in Athens - the company responsible for maintaining Greece's railways.

Tear gas was used to disperse protesters, who threw stones and lit fires in the streets.

At a silent vigil in Larissa to commemorate the victims of the incident, one demonstrator said he felt the disaster had been long coming.

"The rail network looked problematic, with worn down, badly paid staff," Nikos Savva, a medical student from Cyprus, told AFP news agency.

The station master arrested should not pay the price "for a whole ailing system", he added.

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Many of the passengers on board were students in their 20s returning to Thessaloniki after a long weekend celebrating Greek Orthodox Lent.

Fire brigade spokesperson Vassilis Varthakogiannis said temperatures inside the first carriage - which burst into flames - had reached 1,300C (2,370F), making it "hard to identify the people who were inside".

Local media have reported that more than 10 people are still missing, as Greece observes three days of national mourning.

Families have given DNA samples to help identification efforts, with the results expected on Thursday.

One of those, a woman called Katerina searching for her missing brother, a passenger on the train, shouted "Murderers!" outside the hospital in Larissa, directing her anger towards the government and the rail company, Reuters reports.

Kostas Malizos, a recently retired surgeon and Emeritus Professor at Greece's University of Thessaly, has returned to work to perform surgery on injured passengers.

"It's a disaster, it's catastrophic," he said. "Families are crying tonight. Unfortunately, the majority of the lost people are young students. They left home, happy after the long weekend, to go for their studies or to see their relatives and never reached them."

Image shows map of train crash and direction of trains travelling
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2023-03-02 20:15:06Z
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Firefighters battle high-rise blaze in Hong Kong shopping district - The Guardian

Hong Kong firefighters have been battling a blaze that engulfed a construction site in the city’s shopping district.

Officials said the fire broke out at 11.11pm (1511 GMT) on Thursday in the heart of Tsim Sha Tsui, a busy shopping and tourist area on the waterfront.

No casualties had been reported early on Friday, according to the government.

view of skyline with building on fire

Flames were first spotted near scaffolding at the top of the building, with the blaze visible across the harbour and causing sparks to rain down on neighbouring streets.

About an hour later, the fire had spread down the building towards street level, where hundreds of onlookers had gathered.

building on fire

Large debris – apparently from the site – were visible on the ground, and an acrid smell permeated the air, a reporter at the scene said.

The building under construction was a 42-storey “harbourside icon” intended to house the famous Mariners’ Club and a hotel, according to the website of its developer, the Empire Group.

building on fire

The HK$6bn (£639m) redevelopment project was approved in 2019 and was expected to be completed in the first half of this year, according to local media.

Empire Group did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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2023-03-02 19:19:00Z
CBMicGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnRoZWd1YXJkaWFuLmNvbS93b3JsZC8yMDIzL21hci8wMi9maXJlZmlnaHRlcnMtYmF0dGxlLWhpZ2gtcmlzZS1ibGF6ZS1pbi1ob25nLWtvbmctc2hvcHBpbmctZGlzdHJpY3TSAXBodHRwczovL2FtcC50aGVndWFyZGlhbi5jb20vd29ybGQvMjAyMy9tYXIvMDIvZmlyZWZpZ2h0ZXJzLWJhdHRsZS1oaWdoLXJpc2UtYmxhemUtaW4taG9uZy1rb25nLXNob3BwaW5nLWRpc3RyaWN0

Rabu, 01 Maret 2023

Human error to blame for train crash - Greek PM - BBC

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One of Greece's worst-ever rail disasters, which claimed at least 43 lives, was due to "tragic human error", the country's prime minister has said.

PM Kyriakos Mitsotakis spoke after visiting the site of Tuesday night's head-on collision between a passenger service and a freight train.

The local stationmaster has been charged with manslaughter. The Greek transport minister has resigned.

Rescue teams are continuing to search for survivors.

The accident happened just before midnight on Tuesday. The passenger train carrying some 350 people collided with a freight train as it emerged from a tunnel after leaving the town of Larissa.

It is still unclear why the two services were running on the same track.

The stationmaster, who is in charge of signalling, denies wrongdoing and has blamed the accident on a possible technical failure.

After visiting the site, Mr Mitsotakis said everything pointed to "a tragic human error".

"Justice will do its job," he said in a televised address. "People will be held accountable, while the state will be on the side of the people."

Announcing his resignation, Transport Minister Kostas Karamanlis stated: "When something so tragic happens, it is impossible to continue and pretend it didn't happen."

Trade unions said collisions have multiple factors and the crash had highlighted chronic deficiencies, including lack of staff, broken signals and outdated facilities.

Train crash
Getty Images

The first four carriages of the passenger train were derailed and the first two caught fire and were "almost completely destroyed", Thessaly regional governor Kostas Agorastos said.

The train was travelling from Athens to Thessaloniki, which has a sizeable student population, and it is believed many on board were students returning there after a holiday for Greek Orthodox lent.

Survivors have described the chaotic scenes after the crash, with one shaken passenger telling the BBC: "People were panicking and screaming."

Giannis Antonoglou, who escaped from the fifth compartment of the passenger train, said the windows suddenly smashed and "we ended up being tilted 45 degrees as if about to tip".

Stergios Minenis, a 28-year-old passenger who jumped to safety from the wreckage, told Reuters news agency: "The fire was immediate. As we were turning over we were being burned."

Some passengers said they were forced to break carriage windows with their bodies or luggage to escape the burning wreckage.

Larissa's mayor said some of those who died would only be identifiable through genetic testing.

Relatives of missing passengers have provided DNA samples to help the identify bodies, a hospital in Larissa said.

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2023-03-01 20:42:06Z
1811204170

Holiday hotspot Spain sees 2ft of snow as temperatures plummet to -16C - Manchester Evening News

Brits usually head to Spain for sunshine and sandy beaches, yet the country has been hit by heavy snow showers as Storm Juliette batters parts o f the country. Temperatures have dropped to as low as -16C in Spain while the Balearic island of Majorca has been especially hard hit.

The freak weather has caused sinkholes to open up in Palma, Majorca’s main city, while roads have also been blocked by snow. According to the authorities, buildings have collapsed, others have been flooded, roads have been closed and 13 neighbourhoods were left without electricity on the island.

A red weather alert was issued due to the possibility of eight metre high waves, The Mirror reports. On Tuesday night temperatures dropped to -16C in Molina de Aragon, Guadalajara, in central Spain, according to Spain’s official meteorological agency AEMET.

READ MORE: Simon Calder shares Spain holiday travel advice which could save Brits £1,000

“It was a very cold night for us to be starting the meteorological spring,“ AEMET spokesman Ruben del Campo told local media. Images of snow have been shown in coastal areas including San Sebastian and Barcelona as well as Majorca.

Snow covers small village of Cirauqui, near to Pamplona, northern Spain
Snow covers small village of Cirauqui, near to Pamplona, northern Spain

A statement from AEMET read: “Very cold air has arrived to the north east of the country from the Arctic that has caused a significant drop in the temperatures for the peninsula and the Balearic islands. From Wednesday onwards it should start to move away and there should be a slow improvement in the temperatures.”

Residents in Majorca have been told to stay indoors over the past couple of days with the emergency services inundated with more than 350 incidents due to the snow and high winds. There were 50 people trapped in a monastery after police were forced to close a road due to the conditions.

Orange and yellow weather warnings remain in place across the area for winds of up to 80kmph, snow and waves. In the centre of Palma, emergency services are trying to tackle a number of sinkholes which are causing traffic chaos.

The mayor, Jose Hila, has asked people to use the roads as little as possible while the clean up operation continues.

He, reported Diario de Mallorca, said: "We are trying to find the cause and the areas which are affected. The first priority is for safety and then we will look to cover up the holes.

"If it is just a question of what we can see then it will take about two or three days but if there is more to the problem than that then it will take several days longer. We are asking for residents to use the roads as little as possible at the moment."

For more of today's top stories, click here.

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2023-03-01 14:09:04Z
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Greece train crash: Survivors describe 'nightmarish seconds' - BBC

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Survivors have told of a "nightmarish 10 seconds" as their train carriage overturned and was engulfed in flames in a crash in northern Greece.

At least 36 people have died and dozens more were injured in the head-on collision between two trains near the city of Larissa on Tuesday night.

Rescuers have been working through the night to find survivors.

"We heard a big bang," said 28-year-old passenger Stergios Minenis, who jumped to safety from the wreckage.

"We were turning over in the carriage until we fell on our sides and until the commotion stopped. Then there was panic. Cables, fire. The fire was immediate. As we were turning over we were being burned. Fire was right and left," Mr Minenis was quoted as saying by Reuters news agency.

"For 10, 15 seconds it was chaos. Tumbling over, fires, cables hanging, broken windows, people screaming, people trapped."

People have described having to crawl through windows and over broken glass as they tried to escape.

According to one shaken passenger who spoke to Skai television, "the windows suddenly exploded" and "people were screaming and were afraid".

"Fortunately, we were able to open the doors and escape fairly quickly. In other wagons, they did not manage to get out, and one wagon even caught fire."

Fellow passenger Angelos Tsiamouras told local media the crash had felt like an earthquake, while another named Lazos told the newspaper Protothema: "I wasn't hurt, but I was stained with blood from other people who were injured near me."

The passenger train had been travelling from Athens to the northern city of Thessaloniki when it crashed head-on with the other freight train, leading to a fire in at least one of the carriages.

It is being described as the worst train crash Greece has ever seen, but the cause of the collision is not yet known.

About 150 firefighters and 40 ambulances were at the scene, Greek emergency services said, with cranes also used to remove debris.

"It was a very powerful collision," the regional governor of the Thessaly region, Kostas Agorastos, told state-run television.

"This is a terrible night... It's hard to describe the scene."

He said the first four carriages of the passenger train were derailed, and the first two carriages caught fire and were "almost completely destroyed".

"They were travelling at great speed and one (driver) didn't know the other was coming," the governor said.

Footage of the collision's aftermath showed thick plumes of smoke rising from derailed carriages.

Conditions for rescue workers were "very difficult" because of "the severity of the collision", fire service spokesman Vassilis Varthakoyiannis told reporters.

"I've never seen anything like this in my entire life. It's tragic. Five hours later, we are finding bodies," an exhausted rescuer emerging from the wreckage told AFP news agency.

"We are living through a tragedy. We are pulling out people alive, injured... there are dead. We are going to be here all night, until we finish, until we find the last person," another volunteer rescue worker told ERT state broadcaster in comments cited by Reuters.

A wrecked train carriage pictured at the scene of the crash where two trains collided near the city of Larissa, Greece
Reuters
Passengers rescued from the train crash arrive at Thessaloniki railway station, Greece
AFP
The crash site
AFP

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2023-03-01 07:46:37Z
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Selasa, 28 Februari 2023

Russia says military drone attempted to strike gas facility near Moscow - The Guardian

A military drone attempted to strike a gas facility in the Moscow region, according to a senior Russian official, and photos of the wreckage suggested it was Ukrainian-made, indicating a rare attempted strike hundreds of miles behind Russian lines.

The alleged attack was one of several reports of successful or attempted unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) strikes in at least four regions of Russia.

The Moscow region governor, Andrei Vorobyov, on Monday confirmed a UAV crash-landed in the village of Gubastovo near the capital and was apparently aiming for a “civilian infrastructure site”.

The target was a Gazprom gas compression station in the Moscow suburbs, just over 50 miles south-east of the Kremlin. Photographs of the drone posted to social media indicate it was a Ukrainian-made UJ-22.

Ukraine does not publicly claim responsibility for attacks inside Russia.

The UAV apparently clipped trees just before its target and landed 10 metres from the outer fence of the gas compression station, a Gazprom representative confirmed to Russian media.

Ukrjet, the producer of the UJ-22, claims the drone can fly 500 miles (800km) and is armed with an interchangeable payload.

If the strike, along with others on Tuesday, were launched from Ukrainian territory, then it would make them some of the most ambitious since the Kremlin launched its full-scale invasion last February.

Drone strikes launched in December targeted several airfields used by Russian bombers but it was not immediately clear if they were launched from inside or outside Russian territory.

The strikes caused a nervous day in Russia, where airspace was closed over St Petersburg and hackers managed to broadcast a “missile strike threat” over several TV channels and radio stations in the Moscow and St Petersburg regions, as well as areas closer to the border with Ukraine, Voronezh and Belgorod.

“Attention: an air alert is in effect,” a voice read. “Proceed to shelters immediately. Attention, attention, missile strike threat.” A similar incident occurred late last week.

In at least one case, the drones appeared to have struck their targets. Early Tuesday morning, drones armed with explosives also slammed into a Rosneft oil depot in the Krasnodar region, Russian media reported, sparking a fire that required the Russian emergencies ministry to extinguish. Video published on Telegram also appeared to show UAVs flying over the city shortly before the attack.

The drone strikes hit the boiler room of the depot, the Astra news outlet reported. But the city administration of Tuapse, where the facility is located, claimed the drones did not strike the oil tanks. “There is no oil spill. There are no victims,” the city administration said.

Tuapse is about 300 miles from Ukrainian territory and close to the large Russian port of Novorossiysk and the Black Sea city of Sochi.

Unsuccessful drone strikes were also reported in Russia’s Belgorod and Bryansk regions, both on the border with Ukraine. And the head of Russia’s Adigeya also reported that a drone was downed in the region last night.

As regional heads confirmed the drone strikes, Russia closed its airspace over St Petersburg, the country’s second-largest city, in what the government claimed was a drill to simulate the discovery of an enemy UAV flying over the region.

Dozens of flights were cancelled or turned back as St Petersburg’s Pulkovo airport was closed to arriving and departing flights. Some early reports said a drone had also been spotted near St Petersburg, but those have not been confirmed.

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2023-02-28 18:00:00Z
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China hits out at US over TikTok ban on federal devices - BBC

TikTok logoGetty Images

China has accused the US of overreacting after federal employees were ordered to remove the video app TikTok from government-issued phones.

On Monday, the White House gave government agencies 30 days to ensure that employees did not have the Chinese-owned app on federal devices.

The order follows similar moves by the EU and Canada in recent weeks.

A spokesperson for China's foreign ministry accused the US of abusing state power to suppress foreign firms.

"We firmly oppose those wrong actions," spokeswoman Mao Ning told reporters during a news briefing on Tuesday. "The US government should respect the principles of market economy and fair competition, stop suppressing the companies and provide an open, fair and non-discriminatory environment for foreign companies in the US."

"How unsure of itself can the world's top superpower like the US be to fear young people's favourite app like that," she added.

Western officials have become increasingly concerned about the popular video sharing app - which is owned by Chinese firm ByteDance - in recent months.

TikTok has faced allegations that it harvests users' data and hands it to the Chinese government, with some intelligence agencies worried that sensitive information could be exposed when the app is downloaded to government devices.

The company insists it operates no differently to other social media companies and says it would never comply with an order to transfer data.

On Monday, the US Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Director Shalanda Young told agencies they had to scrub the app from all state-issued phones to protect confidential data.

The agency said the guidance marked a "critical step forward in addressing the risks presented by the app to sensitive government data".

Some federal offices - including the White House and the Departments of Defence, Homeland Security and State - have already banned TikTok from their devices.

The US Federal Chief Information Security Officer Chris DeRusha said the move emphasised the Biden administration's "ongoing commitment to securing our digital infrastructure and protecting the American people's security and privacy".

Tuesday's announcement follows the passage of legislation by the US House of Representatives in December which banned the use of TikTok on state-issued phones and gave the White House 60 days to issue agency directives.

And congressional Republicans are expected to pass further legislation in the coming weeks which would give President Joe Biden the power to ban the app nationally.

"We hope that when it comes to addressing national security concerns about TikTok beyond government devices, Congress will explore solutions that won't have the effect of censoring the voices of millions of Americans," a TikTok spokesperson told the BBC.

Canada has also imposed a new ban on the app on government devices starting from Tuesday. The decision followed a review conducted by the country's chief information officer, who ruled the app presented "an unacceptable level of risk to privacy and security".

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said there was enough concern about security around the app to require the change.

"This may the first step, this may be the only step we need to take," he said on Monday at a press conference near Toronto.

And the European Parliament also approved a ban on the app on staff phones, following the European Commission's move last week.

A TikTok spokesperson told the BBC that the bans had been adopted "without any deliberation" and amounted to "little more than political theatre".

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2023-02-28 15:20:29Z
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