Greek government accused of manipulating train tragedy evidence, after crash killed 57
- A goods train and a passenger train collided in 2023, killing 57. Greece’s railway network is plagued by mismanagement, poor maintenance and obsolete equipment
- Media say leaked recordings of staff had been edited to suggest human error was exclusively to blame. Opposition parties have vowed to submit a no-confidence vote
![Two trains in Greece collided in February 2023, killing 57 people. Photo: AP](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/canvas/2024/03/24/81f927d0-f7df-4790-a9b1-1f928e8d0833_06481154.jpg?itok=pnzul6yx&v=1711295530)
Greek opposition parties on Sunday accused the government of manipulating evidence to influence opinion over the country’s worst train tragedy, and vowed to submit a no-confidence vote.
Citing a Sunday newspaper report, the three leading centre-left and leftist parties said the government “handed out” to friendly media edited recordings of train staff, to bolster a narrative that human error caused the collision that killed 57 people in February 2023.
“There is only one way: a censure motion,” Nikos Androulakis, head of the socialist PASOK party, said in a statement.
The main opposition Syriza party called on Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis to resign, and the small leftist Nea Aristera party said it would support the censure motion.
The disaster occurred when a goods train and a passenger train with 350 people aboard, mostly students, collided near a tunnel outside the central city of Larissa shortly before midnight.
The To Vima weekly on Sunday said leaked recordings of train staff on the night of the accident, played by media at the time, had been edited to suggest human error was exclusively to blame.
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