Blitz Bureau
NEW DELHI: At least 21 people were confirmed dead and more than 70 others injured after two high-speed trains collided near the city of Cordoba in southern Spain on January 18, authorities said. Thirty of the injured were in serious condition and hospitalised, Spain’s Transport Minister Oscar Puente said on January 19. Earlier media reports put the number at 25.
The accident occurred at around 19:45 on January 18 when a train carrying 317 passengers on the Malaga-Madrid route derailed for reasons still unknown near Amaduz, about 20 km from Cordoba, Spanish authorities said. The derailed train struck another high-speed train travelling on an adjacent track from Madrid to Huelva, causing the latter to derail. Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez voiced deep condolences over the tragedy.
“Today is a night of deep pain for our country owing to the tragic rail accident in Adamuz,” he wrote on X. Spain’s royal family also extended condolences to the families of the victims, reports Xinhua news agency.
Puente said the collision was “terrible,” saying the last two wagons of the Malaga-Madrid train derailed and struck the first two carriages of the oncoming train, sending them off the tracks.
Emergency services from the Andalusia region were deployed to the scene, and residents helped transfer passengers with minor injuries to a nearby sports centre for first aid. Spain’s Military Emergency Unit was also mobilised to assist in rescue work. Rescue operations continued frantically to search for survivors as officials warned that the death toll could rise. Rail services on the affected lines will be suspended until at least January 21, authorities said.

