Portuguese investigators search for cause of Lisbon streetcar crash that killed 16
LISBON: Investigators sifted through the wreckage of a streetcar in downtown Lisbon on Thursday, trying to determine why the popular tourist attraction derailed during the busy summer season, killing 16 people and injuring 21, five of them seriously.
The Elevador da Gloria came off its rails during the evening rush hour Wednesday when it was packed with locals and international tourists. Officials cordoned off the crash site, and were taking photographs and pulling up a metal cable from beneath the rails that climb one of the Portuguese capital's steep hills.
"This tragedy ... goes beyond our borders," Prime Minister Luis Montenegro said at his official residence, calling it "one of the biggest tragedies of our recent past." Portugal observed a national day of mourning Thursday.
The electric streetcar, also known as a funicular, provides a short and picturesque trip a few hundred meters up and down a city street. It is harnessed by steel cables, with the descending car helping with its weight to pull up the other one, and can carry more than 40 people.
Officials declined to comment on whether a faulty brake or a snapped cable may have prompted the descending streetcar to careen into a building where the steep road bends.
"The city needs answers," Lisbon Mayor Carlos Moedas said in a televised statement, adding that talk of possible causes is "mere speculation."
Operator says the streetcar was inspected daily Police, public prosecutors and government transport experts are investigating the crash, Prime Minister Luis Montenegro told reporters. The government's Office for Air and Rail Accident Investigations said it had concluded its analysis of the wreckage and would issue a preliminary report Friday.
The company that operates Lisbon's streetcars and buses, Carris, said it has opened its own internal investigation.
The streetcar, which has been in service since 1914, underwent a scheduled full maintenance program last year and also underwent 30-minute visual inspections every day, Carris' CEO Pedro de Brito Bogas said during a news conference Thursday.
The streetcar was last inspected nine hours before the derailment, he said, but he didn't detail the visual inspection nor say whether all the cables were tested.
The mayor said he would also ask for an investigation from an outside independent body, but didn't elaborate.
Tourists and locals ride the 19th century streetcar Lisbon's Civil Protection Agency said earlier Thursday that the death toll had risen to 17. It later corrected that to 16, citing a duplication of available information.
All the dead were adults, Margarida Castro Martins, head of Lisbon's Civil Protection Agency, told reporters. She didn't provide their names or nationalities, saying that their families would be informed first.
The transport workers' trade union SITRA said that the streetcar's brakeman, Andre Marques, was among the dead.
The injured include men and women between the ages of 24 and 65, and a 3-year-old child, she said. Among them are Portuguese people, as well as two Germans, two Spaniards and one person each from France, Italy, Switzerland, Canada, Morocco, South Korea and Cape Verde, she said.
The range of nationalities reflects how big a draw the renowned 19th-century streetcar is for tourists and locals alike.
'It could have been us' Felicity Ferriter, a 70-year-old British tourist, had just arrived with her husband at a hotel near the crash site and was unpacking her suitcase when she heard "a horrendous crash."
"We heard it, we heard the bang," she told The Associated Press outside her hotel.
The couple had seen the streetcar when they arrived and intended to ride on it the next day.
"It was to be one of the highlights of our holiday," she said, adding: "It could have been us."
She said that the emergency response was "amazing." Police and ambulances quickly "flooded in," she said.
"It hit the building with brutal force and fell apart like a cardboard box," witness Teresa d'Avo told Portuguese television channel SIC. She said it looked like the streetcar had no brakes. She described watching passersby run into the middle of the nearby Avenida da Liberdade, or Freedom Avenue, the city's main thoroughfare.
Francesca di Bello, a 23-year-old Italian tourist on a family vacation, had been on the Elevador da Gloria just hours before the derailment.
They walked by the crash site on Thursday, expressing shock at the wreckage. Asked if she would ride a funicular again in Portugal or elsewhere, Di Bello was emphatic: "Definitely not."
Service halted as inspections ordered The service, inaugurated in 1885, runs between Restauradores Square and the Bairro Alto neighborhood renowned for its nightlife. The Elevador da Gloria is classified as a national monument.
Lisbon's City Council halted operations of three other famous funicular streetcars in the city while immediate inspections were carried out.
Lisbon hosted around 8.5 million tourists last year, and long lines of people typically form for the brief rides on the popular streetcar.
European Union flags at the European Parliament and European Commission in Brussels flew at half-staff. Multiple EU leaders expressed their condolences on social media.
___
Hernan Munoz in Lisbon contributed to this report.
"This tragedy ... goes beyond our borders," Prime Minister Luis Montenegro said at his official residence, calling it "one of the biggest tragedies of our recent past." Portugal observed a national day of mourning Thursday.
The electric streetcar, also known as a funicular, provides a short and picturesque trip a few hundred meters up and down a city street. It is harnessed by steel cables, with the descending car helping with its weight to pull up the other one, and can carry more than 40 people.
Officials declined to comment on whether a faulty brake or a snapped cable may have prompted the descending streetcar to careen into a building where the steep road bends.
"The city needs answers," Lisbon Mayor Carlos Moedas said in a televised statement, adding that talk of possible causes is "mere speculation."
Operator says the streetcar was inspected daily Police, public prosecutors and government transport experts are investigating the crash, Prime Minister Luis Montenegro told reporters. The government's Office for Air and Rail Accident Investigations said it had concluded its analysis of the wreckage and would issue a preliminary report Friday.
The streetcar, which has been in service since 1914, underwent a scheduled full maintenance program last year and also underwent 30-minute visual inspections every day, Carris' CEO Pedro de Brito Bogas said during a news conference Thursday.
The streetcar was last inspected nine hours before the derailment, he said, but he didn't detail the visual inspection nor say whether all the cables were tested.
The mayor said he would also ask for an investigation from an outside independent body, but didn't elaborate.
Tourists and locals ride the 19th century streetcar Lisbon's Civil Protection Agency said earlier Thursday that the death toll had risen to 17. It later corrected that to 16, citing a duplication of available information.
All the dead were adults, Margarida Castro Martins, head of Lisbon's Civil Protection Agency, told reporters. She didn't provide their names or nationalities, saying that their families would be informed first.
The transport workers' trade union SITRA said that the streetcar's brakeman, Andre Marques, was among the dead.
The injured include men and women between the ages of 24 and 65, and a 3-year-old child, she said. Among them are Portuguese people, as well as two Germans, two Spaniards and one person each from France, Italy, Switzerland, Canada, Morocco, South Korea and Cape Verde, she said.
The range of nationalities reflects how big a draw the renowned 19th-century streetcar is for tourists and locals alike.
'It could have been us' Felicity Ferriter, a 70-year-old British tourist, had just arrived with her husband at a hotel near the crash site and was unpacking her suitcase when she heard "a horrendous crash."
"We heard it, we heard the bang," she told The Associated Press outside her hotel.
The couple had seen the streetcar when they arrived and intended to ride on it the next day.
"It was to be one of the highlights of our holiday," she said, adding: "It could have been us."
She said that the emergency response was "amazing." Police and ambulances quickly "flooded in," she said.
"It hit the building with brutal force and fell apart like a cardboard box," witness Teresa d'Avo told Portuguese television channel SIC. She said it looked like the streetcar had no brakes. She described watching passersby run into the middle of the nearby Avenida da Liberdade, or Freedom Avenue, the city's main thoroughfare.
Francesca di Bello, a 23-year-old Italian tourist on a family vacation, had been on the Elevador da Gloria just hours before the derailment.
They walked by the crash site on Thursday, expressing shock at the wreckage. Asked if she would ride a funicular again in Portugal or elsewhere, Di Bello was emphatic: "Definitely not."
Service halted as inspections ordered The service, inaugurated in 1885, runs between Restauradores Square and the Bairro Alto neighborhood renowned for its nightlife. The Elevador da Gloria is classified as a national monument.
Lisbon's City Council halted operations of three other famous funicular streetcars in the city while immediate inspections were carried out.
Lisbon hosted around 8.5 million tourists last year, and long lines of people typically form for the brief rides on the popular streetcar.
European Union flags at the European Parliament and European Commission in Brussels flew at half-staff. Multiple EU leaders expressed their condolences on social media.
___
Hernan Munoz in Lisbon contributed to this report.
Popular from World
- Trump’s personal rapport with PM Modi is gone, says former US NSA John Bolton; warns ties won’t shield leaders from US president's ‘worst’
- 'Ridiculous': American man slams H-1B policy; says Indian friend forced to leave US after 8 years
- Five Indian-American CEOs at Trump's tech dinner
- 'This should send a chill down the spine of every American': US media reacts to iconic SCO Summit photograph of PM Modi, Xi, and Putin; 'A new world order?'
- Meme Sahib: Trump laughs away Chinese humiliation as critics unload on flippant President
end of article
Trending Stories
- Teachers' Day 2025: Inspiring speech ideas and sample speech in English for school programmes
- Travis Hunter receives heartfelt fatherhood advice from Deion Sanders, who considers the Jaguars rookie “like a son”
- Wayne Gretzky and the Canadian identity crisis: why the Great One no longer defines hockey
- Reese Ketler paralyzed in hockey game and then hears a doctor’s message he never expected
- Eagles vs Cowboys season opener hit by shock Streameast takedown hours before kickoff
- How to get Swift Step (Dash) ability in Hollow Knight Silksong
- "Some women are disrespectful": Patrick Mahomes’ wife Brittany Mahomes opened up about women pursuing the star player
Featured in world
- IDF attack: Hamas spokesman Abu Obayda killed in airstrike – Video
- Joe Biden undergoes skin cancer surgery, fresh videos show head wound; frail appearance sparks concern - watch
- Donald Trump blows up Venezuelan boat: Was the US strike legal? Extrajudicial killing or self-defence?
- 'Show of force': Venezuelan F-16 fighter jets fly over US navy ship days after American strike on boat; tensions escalate
- Larry Ellison’s billion-dollar real estate empire: From Japanese palaces to Hawaiian island mansions
- ‘Hide and comply’: MAGA lashes out at Canadian police chief's statement – here’s why
Visual Stories
- Green tea vs black tea: Which is better for hair growth?
- Rupali Ganguly’s top 10 gorgeous ethnic looks
- Zodiac signs who make the best mentors
- Sreeleela dazzles in elegant sarees
- Bigg Boss 19’s Tanya Mittal looks graceful in sarees
Videos
06:54 ‘Went Into Massage Room & Jeffrey…’: Epstein Survivors Recount Horror | Watch03:53 Maduro’s F-16 ‘Show Of Force’ SHOCKS Trump; Pentagon Warns Venezuela: ‘Don’t Interfere…’06:17 Putin Settles ‘Bear, Tiger Vs Eagle’ Debate Amid Trump's Tariffs On India & China | Watch05:06 Macron POKES Putin, Unveils BLUEPRINT Of Russia Vs NATO War | ‘Soldiers From 26 Nations…’04:33 Trump Loses Temper In EU Leaders’ Call After Putin’s India, China Rebuff: ‘Stop Buying Russian Oil’28:30 Rubio Signals War on Gangs as U.S. Declares Ecuador Cartels Terrorists, Pledges $19.5M in Aid03:08 Trump’s ‘War’ Boss Hegseth Sends Direct Warning To Maduro: ‘If You Poison America…’ | Watch10:53 War Begins? Maduro’s F-16 Jets BUZZ US Destroyer In ‘Show Of Force’; Dares Trump With 12.7 Mn Troops03:33 Trump Aide Rubio’s RARE Rebuke Of Macron Over Palestine Move | ‘Hamas Walked Away Because Of You’
Photostories
- Former U.S. President Joe Biden undergoes skin cancer surgery: What makes this condition so common (and how to prevent it)
- 10 Onam traditions explained for kids
- Meet the golden duo of Bollywood who defined on-screen romance with 16 timeless classics in an 8-year span
- 5 brain workouts that can increase memory and concentration power
- From DD aks Dhivyadharshini to Shabana: This Onam, these divas ace the classic ethnic look
- From Shiva Balaji Manoharan to Nikhil Maliyakkal: A look at the winners of Bigg Boss Telugu
- World Samosa Day 2025: 9 types of samosas every foodie should try
- Kidney health: Is mild back pain a sign of kidney disease? Doctor shares this and 5 other symptoms people often fail to relate to kidney troubles
- Ovarian Cancer: Early signs in women's bodies that could save lives
- Why is sandalwood paste applied to deities: And there is more to it than we can think of
Top Trends
Up Next
Start a Conversation
Post comment