Portuguese investigators search for cause of Lisbon streetcar crash that killed 16

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Lisbon, Sep 4 (AP) Investigators sifted through the wreckage of a streetcar in downtown Lisbon on Thursday, trying to determine why the popular tourist attraction derailed during the busy summer season, killing 16 people and injuring 21, five of them seriously.
     Portugal's attorney-general's office said eight victims have been identified so far: five Portuguese, two South Koreans and a Swiss person. The identities of the other eight are still to be determined, it said in a statement.
     The Elevador da Gloria came off its rails during the evening rush hour Wednesday when it was packed with locals and international tourists. Lisbon hosted around 8.5 million tourists last year, and long lines of people typically form for the short and picturesque trip a few hundred metres up and down a city street.
     “This tragedy... goes beyond our borders,” Prime Minister Luis Montenegro said at his official Carris' CEO Pedro de Brito Bogas said during a news conference Thursday residence, calling it "one of the biggest tragedies of our recent past.” Portugal observed a national day of mourning Thursday.
     The electric streetcar, also known as a funicular, is harnessed by steel cables and can carry more than 40 people. On Thursday, officials took photographs and pulled up cable from beneath the rails that climb one of the Portuguese capital's steep hills.
     Officials declined to comment on whether a faulty brake or a snapped cable may have prompted the descending streetcar to careen into a building where the steep road bends.
     “The city needs answers,” Lisbon Mayor Carlos Moedas said in a televised statement, adding that talk of possible causes is “mere speculation.”
    
     Operator says the streetcar was inspected daily
    
     Police, public prosecutors and government transport experts are investigating the crash, Montenegro told reporters. The government's Office for Air and Rail Accident Investigations said it had concluded its analysis of the wreckage and would issue a preliminary report Friday.
     The company that operates Lisbon's streetcars and buses, Carris, said it has opened its own internal investigation.
     The streetcar, which has been in service since 1914, underwent a scheduled full maintenance program last year and also underwent 30-minute visual inspections every day, Carris' CEO Pedro de Brito Bogas said during a news conference Thursday.
     The streetcar was last inspected nine hours before the derailment, he said, but he didn't detail the visual inspection nor specify when questioned whether all the cables were tested.
     The mayor said he would also ask for an investigation from an outside independent body, but didn't elaborate.
    
     Tourists and locals ride the 19th century streetcar
    
     Lisbon's Civil Protection Agency said earlier Thursday that the death toll had risen to 17. It later corrected that to 16, citing a duplication of available information.
     All the dead were adults, Margarida Castro Martins, head of Lisbon's Civil Protection Agency, told reporters. She didn't provide their identities, saying their families would be informed first.
     The transport workers' trade union SITRA said that the streetcar's brakeman, André Marques, was among the dead.
     The injured include men and women between the ages of 24 and 65, and a 3-year-old child, Castro Martins said. Among them are Portuguese people, as well as two Germans, two Spaniards and one person each from France, Italy, Switzerland, Canada, Morocco, South Korea and Cape Verde, she said.
     The range of nationalities reflects how big a draw the renowned 19th-century streetcar is for tourists and locals alike. (AP) SCY
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(This story has not been edited by THE WEEK and is auto-generated from PTI)