Canadians Pay Homage to Rail Tragedy Victims

W460

Canadians on Saturday paid their respects to victims of a deadly rail disaster that devastated the lakeside village of Lac-Megantic exactly one week ago.

The tragedy took place when a runaway train carrying huge amounts of oil flew off a curb, setting off a massive inferno that devastated much of the Quebec town and killed up to 50 people.

Observances got under way late Friday, when about 100 people placed lit candles in the town's Saint Agnes church, not far from the site of the disaster.

In Montreal, about 200 people gathered at the Notre Dame Basilica to pay their respects.

"I've come here this evening to support those who are mourning down there," said Nathalie Bolduc.

"The loss of human life down there, it's crazy. Just crazy."

Boucherville, about 18 kilometers (11 miles) east of Montreal, saw a procession of about 100 people carrying candles along the town's railway tracks.

Other ceremonies were planned Saturday in Ottawa, Toronto, Winnipeg, and other Canadian cities and towns.

The death toll from the train disaster so far is at 28, with another 22 people missing and presumed dead.

The train, made up of 72 tanker cars loaded with crude oil, derailed in the early hours of July 6 in Lac-Megantic, a town of 6,000 near the Canada-U.S. border.

The disaster appears to have been caused by an engineer's failure to properly set the hand brake on the unmanned train, the railway's chairman said this week.

Comments 2
Thumb chrisrushlau 13 July 2013, 19:10

The railway's chairman emphasized in his remarks to the news media that he would say whatever it took to exonerate him personally, and by extension the government of Canada, from any responsibility for the catastrophe.
The many levels of redundancy in braking for the train, all of which failed, despite notice to the corporation that the train needed maintenance attention following the local fire department's extinguishing a fire on one of the locomotives immediately prior to the "departure" of the runaway train (rolling unpowered down a slope 11 km to the town), suggests that the train's mechanical systems were in a dire state.

Thumb chrisrushlau 13 July 2013, 19:12

Right, 18 km, 11 miles.