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Prosecutors say 25 dead as Nevsky Express train comes off tracks

© RIA Novosti . Михаил Мордасов / Go to the mediabankThree cars of the 12-car train that can travel at 200 km per hour (124 mph) went off the tracks on Friday evening
Three cars of the 12-car train that can travel at 200 km per hour (124 mph) went off the tracks on Friday evening - Sputnik International
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Twenty-five people died and some 63 were injured in the derailment of a Nevsky Express train bound from Moscow to Russia's second largest city St. Petersburg

ST. PETERSBURG, November 28 (RIA Novosti) - Twenty-five people died and some 63 were injured in the derailment of a Nevsky Express train bound from Moscow to Russia's second largest city St. Petersburg, prosecutors said Saturday.

Three cars of the 12-car train that can travel at 200 km per hour (124 mph) went off the tracks on Friday evening near the town of Bologoye on the border between Russia's Tver and Novgorod regions.

Earlier emergencies officials said 22 people were killed and 54 injured in the accident that President Dmitry Medvedev was informed about. Medvedev ordered that all possible resources be used to render medical assistance to those harmed.

The Russian Railways (RZD) railroad monopoly said that train could have been blown up, but power outage on the railroad is also considered a possible reason for the accident. A Moscow police source told RIA Novosti earlier that the train driver had used the emergency brakes just before the derailment.

Emergency Situations Minister Sergei Shoigu is presiding over an emergency conference to deal with the derailment and its consequences.

RZD President Vladimir Yakunin is on his way to the accident site. Ambulances, rescuers, Federal Security Service officers, law enforcers, and railroad specialists are working at the site.

RZD said fifty injured passengers have been sent to hospitals in nearby towns. Those not injured left the site inside cars, buses and on another train bound for St. Petersburg.

Russian Railways said trains will move along a bypass route after the accident to keep railroad communication between the two largest Russian cities running.

Despite that, car drivers in St. Petersburg offer to take people from the northern city to Moscow at 1,500 rubles ($51) per person, according to a RIA Novosti correspondent.

Two Emergency Situations Ministry aircraft were earlier reported heading to the accident site carrying equipment for a mobile hospital to render medical assistance to injured passengers.

It takes express trains some four hours to travel about 650 kilometers from Moscow to St. Petersburg.

 

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