Thomas Mackintosh,
Guy Hedgecoeand
Toby Mann
Catalonian fire serviceA train driver has been killed and at least 37 people injured, five seriously, after a commuter train derailed and crashed near Barcelona two days after a deadly two-train collision in southern Spain.
According to local officials, the Rodalies train collided with a retaining wall which fell on to the track between Gelida and Sant Sadurní.
Catalonia regional fire Inspector Claudi Gallardo said all the passengers had been removed from the train.
The incident occurred as heavy storms battered north-eastern Spain, with coastal areas in the east and north-west of Spain on high alert because of the weather.
Rail officials believe the wall collapsed as the train was passing shortly after 21:00 (20:00 GMT) on Tuesday evening, striking the driver’s cab first and then causing considerable damage to the first carriage of the train in which most of the injured passengers were travelling.
The identity of the driver was not immediately clear as three trainees had been with the driver when the accident happened. Firefighters said two of them were among those seriously injured.
It took almost an hour to free one of the survivors at the scene in Gelida, about 35km (22 miles) west of Barcelona.
Emergency services said they had evacuated some of the injured to nearby Moisès Broggi, Bellvitge, and Vila Franca hospitals.
Services across Catalonia’s main Rodalies commuter rail network have been suspended completely while safety checks are carried out and officials say they will not resume until lines are considered safe.
Local officials believe heavy rain after months of drought is to blame for the collapse of the wall.
MossosMeanwhile, another train on the Barcelona commuter network also derailed on Tuesday.
“The axle was struck by a rock dislodged by the storm,” Spain’s rail network operator Adif said in a statement.
The train was running between Blanes and Maçanet-Massanes, north-east of Barcelona and reportedly carrying about 10 passengers.
As a result of the suspension of services across the entire Rodalies network in Catalonia some 400,000 commuters are expected to be affected, according to Spanish newspaper El País.
The accidents in Catalonia came two days after two high-speed trains collided in Adamuz, Andalusia, in one of the worst Spanish rail accidents in over a decade.
At least 42 people are known to have died after carriages on a Madrid-bound train derailed and crossed over to the opposite tracks and then collided with an oncoming high-speed train.
