Head-on collision between two passenger trains injured 95 people Monday in the south of the Tunisian capital, emergency services said


Caption: Police inspect the damage to one of the locomotives in a train collision in the Jbel Jelloud area in the south of Tunisia's capital Tunis.
A head-on collision between two passenger trains injured 95 people Monday in the south of the Tunisian capital, emergency services said.
"The injured were taken to hospitals and there were no deaths," civil defence spokesman Moez Triaa told AFP, adding that only one of the trains was carrying passengers.
Most of the injured suffered bruises or fractures, none of them life-threatening, he said.
Many passengers were in shock, he added, saying around 15 ambulances had been dispatched to treat the wounded or take them to hospital.
The collision happened at 9:30 am local time (0830 GMT) in the Jbel Jelloud area, on the approach to a terminus in central Tunis.
An AFP reporter at the site saw the front of one of the trains had been caved in.
The cause of the accident was not yet clear and the SNCFT national train company did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Transport Minister Rabi Majidi visited the site of the accident but did not speak to journalists.
Tunisia's ageing railway system has seen several deadly crashes in recent years.
Between 2017 and 2021, the country saw 173 train accidents which killed 229 people and injured 345, said Achraf Yehyaoui, spokesman for a governmental agency for preventing transport accidents.
At least five people were killed and more than 50 injured in late 2016 when a train slammed into a public bus near the site of Monday's crash.
An official said signals and safety gates had been out of service at the time of the crash.
The 2016 accident prompted the sacking of SNCFT chief Sabiha Derbal.
The previous year, the North African country experienced one of its worst railway disasters, with 18 people killed when a train hit a lorry and derailed at a level crossing south of the capital because of a signals failure.
The country of just under 12 million people also has a poor road safety record, with some 980 deaths and more than 6,500 injuries last year according to the interior ministry.
Source: AFP
US, Iran weigh Pakistani-brokered peace plan as Trump's 'hell' warning nears deadline
- 9 hours ago

What should you be teaching your kids right now to prepare them for an AI-scrambled job market?
- 18 hours ago

The high price of everything, explained
- 18 hours ago
IGRC Intelligence Chief Majid Khadami martyred in recent attacks
- 9 hours ago
Markets, bazaars and shopping malls across country except in Sindh to close at 8pm
- 5 hours ago

Govt to credit Rs2,000 petrol subsidy directly into bank accounts
- 5 hours ago
Iran rejects ceasefire as deadline nears on Trump ‘hell’ ultimatum
- 5 hours ago
PM Shehbaz reiterates urgent need for de-escalation in region
- 8 hours ago

PIA withdraws discounts, suspends several flight routes amid jet fuel price hike
- 5 hours ago
PM Shehbaz calls for introducing environment-friendly vehicles
- 5 hours ago

What are gold prices in Pakistan and global markets?
- 9 hours ago

Did Trump accidentally do something woke for global health?
- 9 hours ago






