Mexico, train
Digest more
Officials said 241 passengers and nine crew members were on the train when it went off the rails as it passed a curve near the town of Nizanda.
Mexican authorities said on Sunday that at least 13 people were killed after an Interoceanic Train carrying 250 people derailed in the southern state of Oaxaca. The Mexican Navy said the train, which derailed near the town of Nizanda,
The train was carrying around 250 passengers and crew members on a cross-country route linking the Pacific and the Gulf of Mexico. Nearly 100 people were injured.
The train’s main line only came into service in 2023, under a new program aiming to create an alternative to the Panama Canal.
Thirteen people were killed, and nearly 100 others were injured, after a train derailed in Mexico on Dec. 28. The train was carrying 250 people, including nine crew members, when it derailed in Oaxaca.
Upper Peninsula dam’s condition and regulatory trajectory “mirror” the failures that preceded the 2020 disaster, agency warns.
The museum has been raising funds since 2023 for the locomotive’s restoration. A GoFundMe has been established to cover the additional $50,000 neeeded to fully fund the project.
A freight train slammed into a double-decker bus in Mexico early Monday, killing at least 10 people and injuring more than 40 others, authorities said. The crash took place in an industrial area of warehouses and factories in the town of Atlacomulco, about ...
A farewell event for commuter trains being phased out has raised more than £45,000 for three charities. South West Railway's (SWR) red Class 455 fleet has been in service for 42 years and is being replaced by new Arterio trains.
WPBF Channel 25 on MSN
Train hits unoccupied vehicle in West Palm Beach
A freight train collided with an unoccupied vehicle on the tracks in West Palm Beach, with no injuries reported.
PARAGOULD, Ark. (KAIT) — A woman was taken to a hospital after her car was struck by a train. A call came in at 8:59 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 28, after a 2002 blue Ford Escape traveling westbound on East Garland Avenue in Downtown Paragould became trapped under railroad crossing gates and was struck by a train.
Somewhere between sleep and wake as The Eagles’ “Hotel California” played on loop in my earbuds, I woke up to a dissonant Amtrak intercom chime and these words from our train conductor. Even in my feverish, trance-like state, I sensed we had been still for much too long.