At least five people are dead and and
18 injured after Mexico's notorious cargo train known as "The Beast"
derailed Sunday while carrying hundreds of Central American migrants
derailed in a remote region of the country.
The train company and rescue workers were bringing in two cranes to
begin lifting the eight derailed cars overnight, and officials said it
was possible they might find more victims under the wreckage.
Late Sunday, federal authorities had lowered the death toll to three,
but said minutes later that two more had died, and put the toll back at
the five announced earlier by Tabasco state officials. It said 18
others were injured, two of them near death.
Thousands of migrants ride the roofs of the train cars on their way
north each year, braving brutal conditions for a chance at crossing into
the United States.
The Tabasco state government said at least 250 Honduran migrants were
on the train heading north from the Guatemala border. Heavy rains had
loosened the earth beneath the tracks and shifted the rails, officials
said. Mexico's transportation ministry said the train traveled at six
miles per hour, which meets standards. In a news statement, the
government said the tracks were rebuilt in 2009 and recently received an
inspection.
Dozens of migrants who survived uninjured were sent to a local shelter in the town of Chontalpa.
José Hectór Alfonso Pacheco, of Honduras, said he was riding between
two train cars loaded with scrap metal. He said fellow migrants who
squeezed in between the ladder and the car were the ones who were killed
or injured.
"Many of my Honduran brothers fastened themselves to the train. They
couldn't let go. They are the ones who lost their lives," Alfonso said.
Honduran President Porfirio Lobo set up a call center for families to learn information about their loved ones.
The head of civil protection for Mexico's Interior Department, Luís
Felipe Puente, released a list of 17 Hondurans ranging in ages from 19
to 54 who were taken to two regional hospitals. Six of them were in
serious condition, according to the list he published on his official
Twitter account. Puente said another Guatemalan was also wounded and the
Central American nation's foreign ministry said two were injured.
The locomotive and first car did not derail and were used to move
victims to the nearest hospital, in the neighboring state of Veracruz.
The federal government said the accident happened at 1 a.m. in a ranch
of Huimanguillo, a marshy area surrounded by lakes and forest that is
out of cell phone range.
The Red Cross said dozens of soldiers, marines and civilian emergency
workers rushed to the area, which ambulances couldn't reach. Officials
were trying to establish air or water links to the scene.
Honduran and Guatemalan diplomats traveled to the area to help
identify victims and make sure the injured were getting needed medical
attention, the nations' foreign officials said.
Mario Bustillos Borge, the Red Cross chief in Tabasco, described the
rescue as a complex situation that was making it difficult to get rapid
confirmation of the exact number of dead and injured.
"There are some very high estimates, and others that are more
conservative," he told a local radio station, without providing details.
While the number of Mexicans heading to the U.S. has dropped
dramatically, there has been a surge of Central Americans making the
1,000-mile northbound journey, fueled in large part by the rising
violence brought to their homelands by the spread of Mexican drug
cartels.
Other factors, experts say, are an easing in migration enforcement by
Mexican authorities and a false perception that Mexican criminal gangs
are not preying on migrants as much as they had been.
Central American migration remains small compared to the numbers of
Mexicans still headed north, but steeply rising numbers speak starkly to
the violence and poverty at home. The number of Hondurans deported by
the U.S. government increased between to 32,000 last year from 24,000 in
2011. Authorities say it's hard to estimate the numbers crossing north.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment