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Nine dead in Italy train derailment

A rescuer searches near the passenger train which was derailed by a landslide.
A rescuer searches near the passenger train which was derailed by a landslide.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Train derailed at Castelbello, near the northern city of Bolzano, in the East Alps region
  • Police confirm nine passengers died, 20 injured, 5 seriously
  • Most probable cause of the landslide is a broken irrigation pipe, said local official

Rome, Italy (CNN) -- A train derailment in northern Italy has killed nine people, Italy's Civil Protection office said Monday.

The office had said that the derailment killed 11 people, but it later revised the death toll.

At least 20 people were injured, five seriously, when a landslide derailed the train, authorities said.

The train was a small diesel train with two carriages, traveling on the Val Venosta line. The railway is one of the region's newest, inaugurated in 2005.

Video: Landslide derails train in Italy
Map: Italy train derailment
RELATED TOPICS
  • Italy
  • Train Travel

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The most probable cause of the landslide is a broken irrigation pipe, said Thomas Widmann, head of the transport department for the local government.

The mud from the slide entered the train's cars, suffocating the passengers, he said.

More than 200 rescuers were on the scene.

The train came to rest when it reached the trunk of two big trees, according to a local journalist. One of the carriages was left hanging over the Adige River.

CNN's Gisella Deputato contributed to this report