Deadly Train Crash Renews Safety Concerns Over China’s Rail System

A catastrophic train wreck in eastern China has heightened concerns about the safety of the nation’s high-speed rail system.

As the Los Angeles Times reports, the Saturday night collision of two bullet trains killed at least 43 people and injured more than 200 in Wenzhou, a city in Zhejiang province. The official news agency Xinhua reported that the first train stalled after losing power and then was rear-ended by the second train.

The first train initially was said to have stalled after being struck by lightning, but conflicting details about the episode emerged, and questions about why the second train did not stop in time have remained unanswered.

Amid that confusion, and even after three senior railway officials were fired in response to the crash, Chinese Internet users posted millions of comments expressing their anger and calling for a thorough investigation.

Many were outraged over video posted online showing backhoes breaking apart carriages that had fallen off the elevated tracks. Another photo online showed what some thought were the same backhoes burying parts of the train. Internet users suspecting a cover-up questioned how evidence could be destroyed so quickly.

The New York Times reported that the railway ministry explained the burial by claiming the trains contained valuable “national level” technology that could be stolen.  China’s high-speed rail system, which is the largest in the world, has attracted controversy for years over allegations that its engineering was copied from European and Japanese technology and because the track network was laid in record time. High-speed rail service was introduced in 2007.

Many postings on the Chinese microblogging site, Sina Weibo, on Sunday expressed fears that transparency and safety have been pushed aside in the nation’s rush to modernize. “China, please stop your flying pace,” one post said. “Don’t let the train run out off track, don’t let the bridges collapse, don’t let the roads become traps, don’t let houses become ruins.”

The train crash is one of several high-profile public transportation accidents recently in China. Early Friday morning an overloaded bus caught fire in central Henan Province, killing 41 people. Earlier this month, a subway escalator at  in Beijing collapsed, killing one person and injuring 28. Last week, four bridges collapsed in various Chinese cities.

 

 

 

 

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