Human error blamed for French train crash

Human error was to blame in a deadly head-on train collision earlier this week near France's border with Luxembourg, railway authorities from both countries said today.

Human error blamed for French train crash

Human error was to blame in a deadly head-on train collision earlier this week near France's border with Luxembourg, railway authorities from both countries said today.

An error at the rail traffic control centre in Bettembourg, Luxembourg, was responsible for Wednesday's crash, which killed six and injured 16 others, a joint statement by France and Luxembourg's national railroad companies said.

A three-car passenger train heading from Luxembourg to Nancy, France, and a 22-car French freight train travelling in the opposite direction on the same track collided in Zoufftgen, France, near the border with Luxembourg.

"A human error at the traffic control centre in Bettembourg led to an unwarranted written order authorising a passenger train to circulate on a rail already occupied by a freight train," the statement said. The train engineers, both of whom died in the crash, were not at fault, it said.

Jeannot Waringo, who heads the board of directors for Luxembourg's national railroad company, said his company assumed "100%" responsibility for the accident.

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