Dozens Stranded In Tunnel Beneath English Channel After Train Breaks Down
Dozens of people were left stranded for hours in the tunnel
beneath the English Channel after a train from Calais to Folkestone in United
Kingdom broke down on Tuesday, according to the BBC. Images circulating on social media showed Eurotunnel
Le Shuttle passengers being evacuated through an emergency service tunnel. They
were finally moved to a different train and sent to Kent's Folkestone terminal,
the outlet further said.
A user named Sara Rodes Hughes shared a post on Twitter
and wrote, "I've been told there have been 3 incidences: train stuck, someone
falling ill and having to wait for an ambulance and a car broken down. Waiting
times keep changing, been stuck for almost 4h with 2 little ones and it's
shocking how no real info is provided! Compensation now!"
Another
user named Michael Harrison shared a picture of the passengers being evacuated
and wrote, "I was on the broken-down train. Now sitting on a cargo train
that has trouble gaining traction."
The official Twitter handle of Eurotunnel Le
Shuttle shared a post on Tuesday and wrote, "Due to a technical
issue, our service is running with a delay. Waiting times may be longer than
normal. Rest assured; we will get you away as soon as we can." They also
shared a link for the further updates.
A Eurotunnel spokesperson
said that the services were now back to normal.
"The Shuttle was
brought to a controlled stop and inspected. As a precautionary measure, for
their safety and comfort, we transferred the passengers on-board to another
shuttle, via the service tunnel (which is there for exactly that
purpose)," the spokesman added.
For more detail, please click Here
References:
BBC News, CNN News, NDTV , The News, Al-Jazeera, CNBC, Economist, Times of
India, Sky sports, New York Time, Sky News,
Indianexpress
No comments: