Queronque rail accident
1986 head-on train collision in Chile
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The Queronque rail accident was a head-on train collision that happened on February 17, 1986, on the line between Santiago and Valparaíso in Chile. It is the worst in Chilean history, killing at least 58 people.[1]
19:45
| Queronque rail disaster | |
|---|---|
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| Details | |
| Date | February 17, 1986 19:45 |
| Location | Limache, Marga Marga Province |
| Country | Chile |
| Line | Santiago - Valparaíso |
| Operator | EFE |
| Incident type | Head-on collision |
| Cause | Negligence |
| Statistics | |
| Trains | 2 |
| Passengers | 1000 |
| Deaths | 58+ |
| Injured | 510, 111 serious |

Collision
The accident happened in the Marga Marga Province of Valparaíso Region, between Peñablanca and Limache stations on a sharp curve. Both of the trains involved were three-carriage electric AES units and were carrying around a thousand people in total. The accident happened at 19:45 when the 17:30 from Los Andes to Valparaiso collided head on with a train travelling from Valparaiso to Mapocho Station in Santiago.[2] The front carriages embedded themselves in each other for a distance of five metres, killing those at the front of both trains.[3]
Cause
Repair work to a bridge damaged in an explosive attack by the FPMR[4] six months previously meant that a single line was used for trains travelling in both directions.[5] In addition, the signalling on the line dated from 1928 and had developed a fault a few days before the accident.[3] But the accident was primarily blamed on the stationmaster at Limache, who should have held the train from Los Andes until the train from Valparaiso had passed.[6] Theft of telephone cabling meant that the phone link between stations was not working,[7] and it was over an hour before rescue teams arrived at the scene of the accident.[4] The rescue efforts continued until 11:30 the following morning; an emergency hospital room was set up on the platform at Limache station; its speakers were used to ask for blood donors to come forward.[3]
Death toll
Response
Dictator Augusto Pinochet visited the injured in hospital shortly after the incident and pledged compensation to those affected similar to that in place for road accident victims.[3]
As a result of the tragedy, the train service between Santiago and Valparaiso was suspended, only resuming in 1992 with the installation of radio communications in the trains.[3] The line is now operated by MERVAL, the Valparaiso region metro system.
