One killed, dozens injured in train collision near Bedford
One killed, dozens injured in train crash near Bedford

One person was killed and dozens of others were seriously injured when two passenger trains collided near Bedford, an ambulance service said.

Details of the crash

Footage from the aftermath shows the incident involved two East Midlands Railway (EMR) services, with one smashing into the back of the other on the same line shortly after 5pm on Friday.

A passenger on board one of the trains reported being “flung into the chair in front, and then I saw smoke”.

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One person died, 11 suffered “very serious” injuries and 22 were seriously injured, East of England Ambulance Service said.

All patients with the most serious injuries have all now been taken to hospital.

A further 56 people sustained minor injuries and were treated at the scene or in hospital.

Eyewitness accounts

Passenger Pete Knapp described people “crying, screaming” and said some seemed to have major injuries.

The 40-year-old told the Press Association: “There was a moment of being flung into the chair in front, and then I saw smoke. People were crying, screaming, people were so scared and confused.

“I got up and I saw a lot of people who were unable to speak, had broken legs, and then I managed to get out of the train and because I’m quite thin I was able to squeeze out through the gap in the doors.”

Dr Knapp said he saw people with “life-threatening, major injuries, minor injuries” as well as “people with bandages, people who couldn’t see straight”, while others like him were still able to walk.

He said: “I’ve got blood all over my trousers and my back hurts like hell but I’m all right.”

He said he had not felt the train slow down before the crash but other passengers told him they had.

Official response

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer described the crash as “hugely concerning” and said he is “grateful to the emergency services for their swift response to this tragic incident”.

Air ambulance helicopters were on the ground after the collision happened just south of the Elstow interchange between the A421 and the A6.

There was a long line of emergency vehicles on a rural road as emergency crews and passengers gathered in a neighbouring field.

Members of the public were asked to avoid the scene of the crash, while Bedford Hospital and Luton and Dunstable University Hospital both asked people not to attend their emergency departments “unless they have a genuine medical emergency” as they responded to the incident.

Investigation underway

EMR trains to and from London were suspended for the rest of the day.

Rail journalist Tony Miles said the crash appears to have been a “relatively slow speed collision”.

He told Sky News: “Obviously it’s a rear end collision, they were going in the same direction, so one of them, the rear one was going faster than the one it’s caught up with, for some reason. That’s not a complicated assumption.

“So, the question has to be how has that train that’s in the rear got into contact with the train that it was following, and obviously it’s either gone past the signal that was telling it it should stop, or the signal was faulty, or the driver’s made a mistake in some way, or didn’t read the signal, or something.”

He added: “Even if you’re going 40 miles an hour and you come to a halt in a few metres, you’ve got the energy of a 40-mile-an-hour body in you, and you’re going to move until you hit something, unfortunately.

“So, even relatively low-speed collisions can be dangerous for people that are on board.”

A spokesperson for Network Rail, which manages Britain’s rail infrastructure, said: “We are supporting the efforts of emergency services on scene and our thoughts are with everyone involved.”

A team of Rail Accident Investigation Branch inspectors is on site to gather evidence.

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