Flags at half mast in Taiwan after at least 50 die in train accident

Flags were at half mast in Taiwan on Saturday, and were set to stay that way for three days, to mourn the at least 50 victims of a fatal train accident a day earlier.
At
least 50 people were killed when a train collided with a truck and derailed in
eastern Taiwan on Friday, officials said, noting that the death toll may rise
as recovery efforts continue.
The
Taiwan Railways Administration (TRA) said late on Friday that the derailment in
Hualien County involved a maintenance truck which slid from a slope near a
construction site above the railway.
The
head of an eight-carriage train with 492 passengers and four crew members
travelling from Taipei to eastern Taitung County hit the vehicle shortly before
entering a tunnel, officials said.
Prosecutors
in Hualien were seeking an arrest warrant for a construction site manager
believed to have failed to engage the vehicle's brake properly, state-run
Central News Agency reported on Saturday.
Prosecutors
began questioning the man late on Friday but had to stop when he became too
emotional, the agency reported.
The
Taiwan government late on Friday revised the death toll, bringing it down from
at least 51 to at least 50 due to a counting error.
The
TRA on Saturday named 44 of the victims, which included young children and a
27-year-old French man, as authorities sought to identify the other bodies.
Official
statistics released on Saturday suggests that at least 178 people were also
injured in the accident. Forty of the injured would have to remain in hospital,
including four patients in intensive care.
Deputy
Minister of Transportation and Communications Wang Kwo-tsai told a news
conference on Saturday that the lack of a safety fence around the construction
site, as required by the contract, was a huge management mistake.
The
TRA on Saturday said it would review its ticket policy as 120 passengers had
standing tickets when the derailment occurred on the first day of a four-day
break for Taiwan's annual tomb-sweeping tradition, which sees many Taiwanese
people return home to pay tribute to their ancestors and clean up family tombs.
The operator on Saturday began to remove damaged carriages stuck in the tunnel.
Taiwan
President Tsai ing-wen on the same day visited injured people and victims'
family in Hualien, as she promised to offer the best assistance.
Tsai
also expressed appreciation to the international community who offered
condolences to families affected by the crash.