Spain Train Crash: 39 Dead, Survivors Post SOS

The death toll from yesterday's Spain train crash near Cordoba climbed to at least 39 overnight. First light revealed the scale of destruction—twisted high-speed train cars scattered across tracks near Adamuz. Around 400 passengers and crew caught in the chaos when a Madrid-bound service derailed and collided head-on with an oncoming train.
Been tracking these developments since dawn, and the human suffering cuts deep. Andalusia's emergency team put out a raw public call on X: if you're a survivor, let people know you're safe. 'Share it on social media or WhatsApp—ease your family's worry and leave phone lines open for real emergencies,' they posted. Straightforward. Heart-wrenching. It worked.
Families Live in Information Blackout
Spanish Red Cross's Miguel Ángel Rodríguez captured it on RNE radio: "Families face crushing anxiety from no information. These hours tear at you." Major stations—Atocha, Seville, Malaga—became vigil points as relatives clutched phones, waiting for names, hospitals, anything.
First photos since sunrise show responders climbing through wreckage, assessing mangled compartments. Sunlight exposed what darkness hid—crumpled metal, emergency crews methodical but faces grim.
Survivor's Earthquake Account
RTVE journalist Salvador Jimenez rode in the lead car of the Madrid train. "Pure earthquake feeling," he told reporters. "One moment normal, next the whole world shakes—train off rails, collision." Fellow passenger José spoke to Canal Sur: "Screams everywhere, people yelling for doctors."
Rail networks confirm 400 total aboard when disaster struck late Sunday. Initial Iryo-Renfe collision reports underestimated scale—now 39 confirmed dead, many critical.
EU Stands Ready to Step In
European Commissioner Hadja Lahbib posted support: emergency center coordinating with Spain, "ready to assist if requested." She thanked first responders and called the Spain train crash "heartbreaking," offering condolences to victims' families.
First Images Reveal Devastation Scale
Morning light brought first clear photos—derailed cars flung against concrete pillars, emergency tape everywhere, responders in hi-vis crawling through gaps. Adamuz locals who rushed help first described "nightmare" scenes to arriving media.
Rescue continues slow and dangerous—firefighters shifting debris, medics triaging. Adif suspended Madrid-Andalusia line completely. Survivors' SOS posts started trending—small relief amid mounting tragedy.
This Spain train crash feels like 2013 Galicia all over again. Freshly renovated straight track. High-speed engineering marvels reduced to scrap. Four hundred lives intersected by seconds of chaos. Andalusia mourns while answers remain buried in black boxes and forensics.
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