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Greece opens trial in 2023 train accident that killed 57

The trial for a 2023 train crash in Greece that claimed 57 lives began on Monday amid strikes and protests against the role the state is perceived to have played in the accident.

On February 28, 2023, a?passenger /train? carrying students from Athens up to Thessaloniki in northern Greece collided at Tempi (central Greece) with a freight?train?. This was the worst accident of its kind to ever happen in Greece. It triggered an investigation that lasted for years.

The crash that caused a fireball, and explosion shed light on state failures including corruption, safety shortcomings, and years of neglecting the rail network during the debt crisis of last decade.

Demonstrators in Greece have been holding mass protests to demand political accountability and the end of immunity for politicians.

On Monday, 36 people including a station master, rail managers and others will be tried on charges that range from causing traffic chaos which led to deaths, to negligent manslaughter, to causing bodily injury. There have not been any political trials.

There will be more than 350 witnesses, including victims' families, survivors, and workers in the training industry.

National investigators said that the majority of victims were killed in the crash but as many as seven others died from the fire.

Rail services were suspended on Monday as 'Greek railway workers' staged a 24-hour symbolic strike. The people of the city?Larissa rallied in front of the court.

Investigations found that in 2023, a co-funded project to install safety systems launched in 2014 was still years behind schedule. Families of victims have also accused the authorities of attempting to conceal evidence.

The centre-right, which denies any wrongdoings, has promised justice, and committed to complete railway reform by 2027. Reporting by Renee Maltezou, editing by Edward McAllister & Toby Chopra

(source: Reuters)