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Train derailment that killed 3 in Germany apparently was caused by landslide

News

Train derailment that killed 3 in Germany apparently was caused by landslide
News

News

Train derailment that killed 3 in Germany apparently was caused by landslide

2025-07-28 17:07 Last Updated At:17:20

BERLIN (AP) — Investigators believe a landslide brought on by heavy rainfall likely caused a regional train to derail in southern Germany, killing three people and injuring 41 more.

More than 100 people were aboard the Deutsche Bahn train when at least two carriages derailed Sunday evening in a forested area near Riedlingen, about 158 kilometers (98 miles) west of Munich.

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District fire chief of the Biberach district, Charlotte Ziller, left, shows the district administrator of the Biberach district, Mario Glaser, and Interior Minister Thomas Strobel, center, the scene of the derailed regional passenger train accident near Riedlingen, Germany, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (Thomas Warnack/dpa via AP)

District fire chief of the Biberach district, Charlotte Ziller, left, shows the district administrator of the Biberach district, Mario Glaser, and Interior Minister Thomas Strobel, center, the scene of the derailed regional passenger train accident near Riedlingen, Germany, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (Thomas Warnack/dpa via AP)

Wagons of a derailed regional passenger train lie on a railroad line near Riedlingen, Germany, early Monday, July 28, 2025. (Dpa via AP)

Wagons of a derailed regional passenger train lie on a railroad line near Riedlingen, Germany, early Monday, July 28, 2025. (Dpa via AP)

Emergency services work on the tracks by a landslide after a regional passenger train derailed near Riedlingen, Germany, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (Nico Pointner/dpa via AP)

Emergency services work on the tracks by a landslide after a regional passenger train derailed near Riedlingen, Germany, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (Nico Pointner/dpa via AP)

Wagons of a derailed regional passenger train lie on a railroad line near Riedlingen, Germany, Monday, July 28, 2025. (Thomas Warnack/dpa via AP)

Wagons of a derailed regional passenger train lie on a railroad line near Riedlingen, Germany, Monday, July 28, 2025. (Thomas Warnack/dpa via AP)

The train's 32-year-old driver, a 36-year-old apprentice and a 70-year-old passenger were killed, police said Monday. Some of the 41 injured were seriously hurt.

Police said the downpours in the area caused a sewage shaft to overflow, likely triggering the landslide of an embankment where the derailment occurred.

There was no evidence of an external influence that could have caused the derailment, police said.

Photos from the scene showed parts of the train on its side as rescuers climbed atop the carriages.

“Such pictures shake us to the core,” Deutsche Bahn CEO Richard Lutz said Monday, offering his condolences to the victims’ families.

He pledged full support for the effort to clear up the cause.

Geir Moulson in Berlin contributed to this report.

District fire chief of the Biberach district, Charlotte Ziller, left, shows the district administrator of the Biberach district, Mario Glaser, and Interior Minister Thomas Strobel, center, the scene of the derailed regional passenger train accident near Riedlingen, Germany, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (Thomas Warnack/dpa via AP)

District fire chief of the Biberach district, Charlotte Ziller, left, shows the district administrator of the Biberach district, Mario Glaser, and Interior Minister Thomas Strobel, center, the scene of the derailed regional passenger train accident near Riedlingen, Germany, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (Thomas Warnack/dpa via AP)

Wagons of a derailed regional passenger train lie on a railroad line near Riedlingen, Germany, early Monday, July 28, 2025. (Dpa via AP)

Wagons of a derailed regional passenger train lie on a railroad line near Riedlingen, Germany, early Monday, July 28, 2025. (Dpa via AP)

Emergency services work on the tracks by a landslide after a regional passenger train derailed near Riedlingen, Germany, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (Nico Pointner/dpa via AP)

Emergency services work on the tracks by a landslide after a regional passenger train derailed near Riedlingen, Germany, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (Nico Pointner/dpa via AP)

Wagons of a derailed regional passenger train lie on a railroad line near Riedlingen, Germany, Monday, July 28, 2025. (Thomas Warnack/dpa via AP)

Wagons of a derailed regional passenger train lie on a railroad line near Riedlingen, Germany, Monday, July 28, 2025. (Thomas Warnack/dpa via AP)

NUUK, Greenland (AP) — For several weeks, international journalists and camera crews have been scurrying up to people in Greenland's capital to ask them for their thoughts on the twists and turns of a political crisis that has turned the Arctic island into a geopolitical hot spot.

President Donald Trump insists he wants to control Greenland but Greenlanders say it is not for sale. The island is a semiautonomous territory of Denmark and the prime minister of that country has warned that if the U.S. tries to take Greenland by force, it could potentially spell the end of NATO.

Greenlanders walking along the small central shopping street of the capital Nuuk have a hard time avoiding the signs that the island is near the top of the Western news agenda.

Scores of journalists have arrived from outlets including The Associated Press, Reuters, CNN, the BBC and Al Jazeera as well as from Scandinavian countries and Japan.

They film Nuuk's multicolored houses, the snowcapped hills and the freezing fjords where locals go out in small boats to hunt seals and fish. But they must try to cram their filming into about five hours of daylight — the island is in the far north and the sun rises after 11 a.m. and sets around 4 p.m.

Along the quiet shopping street, journalists stand every few meters (feet), approaching locals for their thoughts, doing live broadcasts or recording stand-ups.

Local politicians and community leaders say they are overwhelmed with interview requests.

Juno Berthelsen, MP for the Naleraq opposition party that campaigns for independence in the Greenlandic parliament, called the media attention “round two,” referring to an earlier burst of global interest following Trump's first statements in 2025 that he wanted to control Greenland.

Trump has argued repeatedly that the U.S. needs control of Greenland for its national security. He has sought to justify his calls for a U.S. takeover by repeatedly claiming that China and Russia have their own designs on Greenland, which holds vast untapped reserves of critical minerals.

Berthelsen said he has done multiple interviews a day for two weeks.

“I'm getting a bit used to it,” he said.

Greenland's population is around 57,000 people —- about 20,000 of whom live in Nuuk.

“We’re very few people and people tend to get tired when more and more journalists ask the same questions again and again,” Berthelsen said.

Nuuk is so small that the same business owners are approached repeatedly by different news organizations — sometimes doing up to 14 interviews a day.

Locals who spoke to the AP said they want the world to know that it's up to Greenlanders to decide their own future and suggested they are perplexed at Trump's desire to control the island.

“It’s just weird how obsessed he is with Greenland,” said Maya Martinsen, 21.

She said Trump is “basically lying about what he wants out of Greenland,” and is using the pretext of boosting American security as a way to try to take control of “the oils and minerals that we have that are untouched.”

The Americans, Martinsen said, “only see what they can get out of Greenland and not what it actually is.”

To Greenlanders, she said, “it's home.”

“It has beautiful nature and lovely people. It’s just home to me. I think the Americans just see some kind of business trade.”

Kwiyeon Ha contributed to this report.

A journalist films in Nuuk, Greenland, Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026. (AP Photo/Emma Burrows)

A journalist films in Nuuk, Greenland, Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026. (AP Photo/Emma Burrows)

An AP journalist films people sitting by the sea in Nuuk, Greenland, Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026. (AP Photo/Emma Burrows)

An AP journalist films people sitting by the sea in Nuuk, Greenland, Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026. (AP Photo/Emma Burrows)

A journalist conducts an interview in Nuuk, Greenland, Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026. (AP Photo/Emma Burrows)

A journalist conducts an interview in Nuuk, Greenland, Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026. (AP Photo/Emma Burrows)

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