Rail traffic: Railway: Massive train cancellations after cable sabotage

rail transport
Train: Massive train cancellations after cable sabotage

A technical fault led to a complete standstill in long-distance traffic in northern Germany. photo

© Bodo Marks/dpa

Ironically, at the start of the weekend, countless travelers are slowed down on Saturday. A disruption paralyzes all long-distance and partly also regional traffic. According to Bahn information, the glitch affected an “indispensable” technology.

Nothing works for hours on most rails in the north: a technical fault in the train radio system caused chaos on the train on Saturday and messed up the start of the weekend for many travelers.

The long-distance and partly also the regional traffic of Deutsche Bahn were affected in large parts of northern Germany. In the course of the morning, the railway then reported that the disruption had been rectified, but that there could still be impairments.

Countless passengers were stranded at the major train stations such as Hanover, Hamburg and Berlin. Long queues formed at information desks, while the large display boards in the station halls were either completely empty or information was given about “indefinitely late” trains or complete cancellations.

Bahn suspects sabotage

According to Deutsche Bahn, the large-scale failures in train traffic in northern Germany are due to sabotage. “Due to sabotage of cables, which are indispensable for train traffic, Deutsche Bahn had to stop train traffic in the north for almost three hours this morning,” said a spokeswoman for the German Press Agency in Berlin on Saturday. The responsible security authorities had started the investigation.

It was previously said that the severe problems in northern Germany were due to a disruption in the digital train radio GSM-R (Global System for Mobile Communications – Rail). A railway spokeswoman said: “It is used for communication between the control centers that control train traffic and the trains and is therefore an indispensable part of smooth train traffic.”

Many travelers get stranded in Hanover

At the Hanover rail junction, where important north-south and east-west rail connections meet, the waiting rail passengers were largely calm, as a dpa reporter reported. Many of them would have stood shaking their heads in front of the large display board that informed about the train cancellations. But there was no aggressive mood.

Later, the train began to distribute coffee and tea to those waiting. Outside, small groups had formed at the taxi rank and tried to get by in small car pools by taxi to the next big city.

In Hamburg at 10.49 a.m. the first long-distance train, the ICE 509 to Munich via Berlin and Erfurt, left the main station, as a dpa reporter reported there. It was half an hour late and heavily overcrowded.

In the morning, the bad news was: “There are currently no long-distance travel options from/to Hamburg, Schleswig-Holstein and Lower Saxony in/from the direction of Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe, Berlin and NRW.” Specifically, for example, all ICE traffic between Berlin, Hanover and North Rhine-Westphalia was stopped, as the railway company announced on its website.

International connections were also affected. IC trains between Berlin and Amsterdam didn’t run like that at all. IC trains from Copenhagen terminated at the Danish-German border in Padborg. There was also a standstill in some regional trains – such as RE and RB connections in Lower Saxony, Bremen and Schleswig-Holstein, as the railway announced.

Alternative connections completely overcrowded

As an alternative, the company suggested travelers between Berlin and Cologne and between Berlin and Baden-Württemberg and Switzerland to use long-distance connections with a change in Erfurt and Frankfurt am Main. “Please understand that the trains that are still running sometimes have a very high number of passengers,” it said.

Many travelers who wanted to travel from Berlin to North Rhine-Westphalia, for example, followed the train’s recommendation and took the detour with a change in Frankfurt. The result was completely overcrowded trains, as a dpa reporter from the ICE 934 reported on the journey to Frankfurt. “No getting through in the aisles because everything is blocked with passengers sitting or standing there,” he said.

Deutsche Bahn recommended that its travelers inform themselves shortly before planned trips via www.bahn.de/reiseauskunft, via the “DB Navigator” app or by calling 030/2970. The train also promised a special goodwill: all passengers who have postponed their trip planned for October 8th due to the train radio disruption can use their already booked long-distance ticket flexibly within the next seven days, as it was said. “In addition, the general passenger rights apply in the event of a delay or cancellation of the train.”

dpa

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