5
dead, 40 still missing after oil train explodes near US-Canada border
Death
toll could surge — Burning crude went in sewers and rose up through
manholes, setting buildings on fire — City’s downtown core
“almost completely destroyed”
8
July, 2013
The
air brakes on the runaway oil train that devastated a Quebec town
early Saturday had been disabled by firefighters who were called to
extinguish a blaze aboard one of the locomotives 90 minutes before
the disaster, the head of the railway said Monday.
The
news came as authorities recovered eight more bodies from the
devastation in Lac-Megantic, raising the death toll to 13, with about
40 people still missing and feared dead.
The
train exploded in a series of fireballs after it careened eight miles
down a sloping siding and derailed about 1 a.m. ET Saturday. All but
one of the 73 tanker cars were carrying crude oil from North Dakota
to a refinery in New Brunswick, and at least five exploded.
Volunteer
firefighters in nearby Nantes had been called about 11:30 p.m. Friday
to extinguish a blaze in one of the five locomotives, Fire Chief
Patrick Lambert toldThe Montreal Gazette.
He
told Reuters that firefighters had shut down the locomotive while
they battled the fire, which was apparently caused by a broken oil or
fuel line. But the train's crew had left the engine idling to keep
the air brakes pressurized so the train wouldn't roll, said Ed
Burkhardt, chairman of Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway.
Lambert
said the local railway dispatcher was contacted to report the engine
fire had been put out. "We told them what we did and how we did
it," he said.
"There
was no discussion of the brakes at that time," he added. "We
were there for the train fire. As for the inspection of the train
after the fact, that was up to them."
As
fire crews continued to cool overturned oil tankers Monday, searchers
in Lac-Megantic, Quebec, looked for remains of victims of the inferno
from a train derailment early Saturday.(Photo: Ryan Remiorz, The
Canadian Press/AP)
What
the dispatcher did after speaking with the Nantes fire service was
not immediately clear. Burkhardt said that if the engine had been
shut down, "someone should have made a report to the local
railroad about that." He said the train's operator was staying
at a nearby hotel.
Andre
Gendron, who lives next to the rail yard, told Reuters that about
five minutes after firefighters left, "I felt the vibration of a
train moving down the track. I then saw the train move by without its
lights on."
"It
wasn't long after that I heard the explosion," he said.
As
searchers slowly worked their way through the smoldering devastation
Monday, firefighters doused two oil-filled cars with water and foam
to keep them from overheating and exploding.
Many
of those missing were believed to have been drinking at a popular
downtown bar in the lakeside town of 6,000, near the Maine border.
Crews had not yet reached the night spot, Quebec provincial police
Sgt. Benoit Richard said Monday morning.
Anne-Julie
Huot, 27, said at least five friends and about 20 acquaintances
remained unaccounted for.
"I
have a friend who was smoking outside the bar when it happened, and
she barely got away, so we can guess what happened to the people
inside," Huot said. "It's like a nightmare."
A
coroner's spokeswoman said it may not be possible to recover some of
the bodies because of the intensity of the blasts. Spokeswoman
Geneviève Guilbault said the bodies are so badly burned that
identifying them could take a long time.
The
explosion and flames forced about a third of the community of 6,000
from their homes. About 1,500 may be able to return home Tuesday,
authorities said.
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