Smoke fills a DC Washington subway tunnel ONE person is dead, - TopicsExpress



          

Smoke fills a DC Washington subway tunnel ONE person is dead, three are reportedly critically injured and as many as 84 have been hospitalised after smoke filled a DC, Washington subway tunnel. A woman died after thick smoke filled the upper level of the L’Enfant Plaza Metro station in southeast DC during the evening rush, officials said. DISASTER: Canadian train derails in Saskatchewan, catches fire A spokeswoman for the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) confirmed the incident, which caused rush-hour mayhem in the nation’s second-busiest mass transit system after New York. Officials do not yet know the cause of the smoke. Metro described it as a tunnel issue, not a train issue, and said there is damage to the tunnel. The smoke forced the evacuation of startled passengers and meant afternoon rush-hour commuters had to find other ways to get home. Emergency workers escorted smoke inhalation victims to medical aid buses to receive oxygen. WMATA said on its website that the “source of the smoke has not been determined” and that the National Transportation Safety Board has launched an investigation. Photos posted on social media showed passengers crammed into smoke-filled trains covering their mouths and eyes, while the subway tunnel was engulfed with thick grey fog. The station was temporarily closed. Service on two of the main city lines was partially suspended. WMATA said emergency crews were deployed and that the station was being aired out. “Metro Transit Police and fire department personnel are on scene at L’Enfant Plaza for smoke in the station,” the metro system said on its website. “Metro has activated tunnel fans to ventilate the area.” The station is near several government buildings, office complexes and restaurants. Washington’s Metro system serves five million people in a 1,500-square-mile (3,885-square, kilometre) area, which includes transport to neighbouring Virginia and Maryland states. The trains and buses provide about 2.3 million trips per year, according to WMATA.
Posted on: Tue, 13 Jan 2015 09:04:51 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015