International

Boulder derails train in French Alps; two dead

In the first such accident known on the line, officials are unclear about what caused the rock to fall

A train derailment in the French Alps killed two and injured at least seven people on Feb. 8, 2014.
REUTERS /OLIVIER ANRIGO /LANDOV

A falling boulder derailed a train in the French Alps on Saturday, killing two people and partly pushing one of the train’s carriages over the edge of a mountain slope, local officials said.

At least nine people were injured, one of them seriously, in the accident on a train line popular with tourists between the villages of Saint-Benoit and Annot in southeastern France, the officials said.

"An enormous rock broke off from the mountain and hit the side of the train with extreme force," Charbel Aboud, deputy prefect for the region, told a news conference. He said the boulder may have weighed as much as 20 tons.

The two dead were a French woman from the region and a Russian woman who was traveling with her husband, he said.

Officials said it was unclear what had caused the rock to fall. Netting is used in the region to prevent rockfalls, and this was the first such accident known on the line, which runs from Nice on the coast to the Alpine town of Digne-les-Bains.

The mountainous location and snow on the ground had initially hampered rescue efforts.

Seven people were killed last year when a mainline train derailed south of Paris in an accident that has been attributed to a fault on the track.

Reuters

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