Train disaster in Greece: anger degenerates into violence, the station master in detention

Violent clashes pitted police and protesters in Athens on Sunday on the sidelines of a rally after the train disaster that killed 57 on Tuesday, sparking outrage across the country despite the prime minister's mea culpa

Train disaster in Greece: anger degenerates into violence, the station master in detention

Violent clashes pitted police and protesters in Athens on Sunday on the sidelines of a rally after the train disaster that killed 57 on Tuesday, sparking outrage across the country despite the prime minister's mea culpa.

In Larissa, the town closest to the scene of this accident, the station master implicated for having made a fatal error has been charged with his alleged responsibility in "the death of a large number of people", a crime punishable a sentence ranging from ten years to life in prison, according to the Greek Penal Code.

He was remanded in custody.

Vassilis Samaras, 59, whose identity has been revealed by the Ministry of Transport, has admitted responsibility for the head-on collision between a passenger train and a freight convoy, which ended up on the same track.

But the demonstrators, Sunday in Athens, demanded that the responsibilities be sought in the presumed state of dilapidation of the railway equipment, which left the fate of the passengers in the hands of an inexperienced station master.

"Down with murderous governments!", "It was not a human error!", read the banners held up by the 12,000 or so people who shouted their anger in Syntagma Square, the large esplanade in front of the Parliament of the Greek capital.

Protesters released hundreds of black balloons to pay tribute to the victims.

This tragedy aroused immense anger at the negligence and shortcomings in the railways. And the Athenian rally, the fourth since the accident, degenerated into violent incidents.

Protesters threw Molotov cocktails and police responded with tear gas and stun grenades, AFP journalists found.

"We feel immense rage!" Summed up Michalis Hasiotis, president of the accountants' union, in the procession. "The greed, the lack of measures taken for the protection of passengers has led to the worst railway tragedy in our country".

"Nothing is going well in this country, hospitals are dying, schools are closing, forests are burning... Who are they kidding?" added Nikos Tsikalakis, president of a railway union.

Most of the victims were young people and students returning to Thessaloniki, the large university city, after a long weekend.

On television, heartbreaking images of parents in tears, desperately waiting in front of a hospital for information on the fate of their children, have also contributed to casting shame on the authorities and their management, deemed disastrous, of this disaster.

On Sunday morning, before a religious ceremony at the Orthodox Cathedral in Athens, Conservative Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis asked the families of the victims for forgiveness in a solemn address.

"As Prime Minister, I owe everyone, but especially the relatives of the victims, (to ask) for forgiveness," he wrote. "In the Greece of 2023, it is not possible for two trains to run in opposite directions on the same line and for no one to notice."

"We cannot, do not want and must not hide behind human error" imputed to the station master, he insisted.

The lack of experience of the station master has indeed been denounced since the day after the tragedy. According to the Greek media, he had received only a short training before finding himself alone, as station master, while traffic on this line was intense due to a long weekend.

According to a judicial source, the investigation also aims "to initiate criminal proceedings, if necessary, against members of the management of the company" Hellenic Train, the Greek railways.

The burials of victims also continued on Sunday in immense emotion.

At the small Rapsani station, near the scene of the accident in the center of the country, parents of students placed red and white carnations and lit candles on the tracks.

The anger is primarily directed at Hellenic Train. The word "Assassins" was painted in red letters on a window at the headquarters in Athens on Friday.

The company is implicated for numerous negligence and shortcomings that led to this disaster described as a "national tragedy" by the authorities.

She defended herself on Saturday evening, claiming to have "been present from the first moments on the scene" and to have set up "a call center (...) to provide information".

Hellenic Train was purchased in 2017 by the Italian public group Ferrovie Dello Stato Italiane (FS) as part of the privatization program demanded by Greece's creditors during the economic crisis (2009-2018).

Union representatives of the railways had sounded the alarm three weeks ago on the risk of accident.

05/03/2023 21:33:20 - Athens (AFP) - © 2023 AFP