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Greeks take to the streets in protest after horrific train wreck kills 57

The streets of Athens are scenes of white-hot anger after the train wreck and its scores of victims. <i>Photo: EPA</i>

The streets of Athens are scenes of white-hot anger after the train wreck and its scores of victims. Photo: EPA

Greek railway workers have extended their strike to a second day and more protest rallies are planned amid anger over a devastating train crash that killed at least 57, among them many university students.

Carriages were thrown off the tracks, crushed and engulfed in flames when a high-speed passenger train with more than 350 people on board collided head-on with a freight train late on Tuesday.

“The federation has been sounding alarm bells for so many years, but it has never been taken seriously,” the main rail workers union said, demanding a meeting with the new transport minister, appointed after the crash with a mandate to ensure such a tragedy can never happen again.

The union said it wanted a clear timetable for the implementation of safety protocols.

Questions around the crash, which happened as the two trains were on the same track, involve faulty signalling and maintenance issues.

Work resumed at the crash site, where rescue staff used cranes to lift some of the carriages that were thrown off the tracks, which could be wrapped up on Friday.

“The operation is under way, it was planned to end today, we hope it will end today but there’s always the unknown factor,” a fire brigade official said.

It was unclear if more were still missing, or how many.

Amid shock and sorrow in a country where three days of national mourning have been declared, families and friends said they wanted answers over how such a crash could have happened.

On Thursday, outside the hospital in Larissa, where many of the victims were brought, a woman called Katerina, whose brother was missing, screamed: “Murderers! Murderers! I will leave tomorrow with a coffin!”

Katerina, whose anger was directed at the government and the rail company, had, like other relatives looking for loved ones, given a DNA sample to try and identify her brother.

A woman whose husband and five-year-old son were on the train told Greek TV: “All those people who are there, they’re useless, useless. Some MPs are coming out and offering condolences, so what? Will it bring our children back?”

Asked if she gave DNA for identification, she said, on footage broadcast by Mega TV: “To identify what, ashes?”

After evening protests in the past two days, two more rallies are planned in Athens on Friday.

-AAP

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