One person has died and several people are reported to be missing after a train, believed to be carrying crude oil, derailed and sparked several explosion in the middle of a small town in the Canadian province of Quebec. At least 30 buildings are believed to have been destroyed in the blast in Lac-Megantic on Saturday, and up to 1 000 people have been evacuated from the area.
The incident occurred shortly after 5 GMT when a freight train derailed in Lac-Megantic, a lakeside town of about 6 000 people near the border with Maine.
Although police said they could not yet get close enough to determine whether there were any casualties from the still-burning fires, an aerial photograph showed widespread devastation in the town centre.
Police Sergeant Gregory Gomez del Prado, speaking from Montreal, told Al Jazeera that the authorities were on the scene trying to contain the fire but have not yet been able to extinguish it.
“We do believe we have fatalities, and we are basically trying to get information from all the witnesses and also locate the missing people” he said.
He added that the provincial police were also concerned of the impact of the oil on the environment.
Al Jazeera’s Daniel Lak, reporting from Lac-Megantic, said the explosion had taken place in an area including popular restaurants and cafes.
The correspondent said that the train’s crew had tied down for a crew change 11km down the track several hours before the train, without a driver, rolled in to town and derailed.
A witness told a local broadcaster the town centre had been crowded at the time of the derailment. Radio-Canada reported that one building at the centre of the town was a bar popular with young people.
“Many parents are worried because they haven’t been able to communicate with a member of their family or an acquaintance,” Mayor Colette Roy-Laroche told the local channel. “We can’t give out any information on what’s happening right now because the firemen haven’t been able to get close.”
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation said four pressurised tank cars blew up after the train, which had 73 cars in all, came off the rails. Residents told reporters they had heard five or six large blasts.
Fire officials said they feared more of the tanker cars were at risk of exploding. About 30 buildings in the town centre were destroyed, some by the initial blast and others by the subsequent fire, they said. — AP



