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Driver arrested after HK tram flips over, injuring 14

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The driver of a double-decker tram that tipped over in Hong Kong injuring 14 people was arrested Thursday on suspicion of dangerous driving.

Five women and nine men including the driver were injured, with some taken to hospital, according to police.

The incident, rare for the city's highly efficient public transport network, occurred around midnight (1600 GMT).

A police spokesman said the driver, surnamed Lo, 23, was being questioned.

News footage from local TV stations showed firefighters at the scene, and one person wearing an oxygen mask while being carried out of the flipped tram on a stretcher.

Images taken by an AFP photographer on site revealed the tram being turned right-side-up shortly afterwards.

It is the second incident on Hong Kong's public transport network this year, usually regarded among the safest and best infrastructure systems in the world, with accidents uncommon.

Seventeen people were injured in February when a fire engulfed a subway train, triggering the evacuation of Tsim Sha Tsui station -- a major hub -- during rush hour and causing chaos on the platform.

A double-decker Hong Kong tram is lifted by crane after it tipped over on a main road in the city
A double-decker Hong Kong tram is lifted by crane after it tipped over on a main road in the city
ANTHONY WALLACE, AFP

Police later arrested a man for arson.

Trams, known as "ding-dings" for the sound of their bells, have serviced the city's main island for more than a century and carry around 200,000 passengers a day.

With around 160 cars, the tram network is the world's largest fleet of double-decker tramcars still in operation, charging a flat rate of just HK$2.30 (30 US cents) for adults to ride along the 120-stop route.

The driver of a double-decker tram that tipped over in Hong Kong injuring 14 people was arrested Thursday on suspicion of dangerous driving.

Five women and nine men including the driver were injured, with some taken to hospital, according to police.

The incident, rare for the city’s highly efficient public transport network, occurred around midnight (1600 GMT).

A police spokesman said the driver, surnamed Lo, 23, was being questioned.

News footage from local TV stations showed firefighters at the scene, and one person wearing an oxygen mask while being carried out of the flipped tram on a stretcher.

Images taken by an AFP photographer on site revealed the tram being turned right-side-up shortly afterwards.

It is the second incident on Hong Kong’s public transport network this year, usually regarded among the safest and best infrastructure systems in the world, with accidents uncommon.

Seventeen people were injured in February when a fire engulfed a subway train, triggering the evacuation of Tsim Sha Tsui station — a major hub — during rush hour and causing chaos on the platform.

A double-decker Hong Kong tram is lifted by crane after it tipped over on a main road in the city

A double-decker Hong Kong tram is lifted by crane after it tipped over on a main road in the city
ANTHONY WALLACE, AFP

Police later arrested a man for arson.

Trams, known as “ding-dings” for the sound of their bells, have serviced the city’s main island for more than a century and carry around 200,000 passengers a day.

With around 160 cars, the tram network is the world’s largest fleet of double-decker tramcars still in operation, charging a flat rate of just HK$2.30 (30 US cents) for adults to ride along the 120-stop route.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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