Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Sleeping man is struck by train in Peru but survives

Train tracks in Peru: A drunken man fell asleep recently on tracks in another part of the country and was hit by a train, but survived
Train tracks in Peru: A drunken man fell asleep recently on tracks in another part of the country and was hit by a train, but survived - Copyright AFP Cris BOURONCLE
Train tracks in Peru: A drunken man fell asleep recently on tracks in another part of the country and was hit by a train, but survived - Copyright AFP Cris BOURONCLE

An apparently drunken man somehow survived after being struck Saturday by a cargo train while sleeping along train tracks in Peru, local authorities said.

“The train knocked him over but through some miracle did not kill him,” General Javier Avalos, a security official for the town of Ate in Lima province, told AFP.

“He apparently was in a state of intoxication, fell asleep along the train tracks and did not feel the train coming,” Avalos said. 

The train was on a regular run toward the Peruvian Andes when it struck 28-year-old Juan Carlos Tello, he said, adding that it stopped quickly.

Surveillance footage released by the city shows the locomotive dragging the young man for several yards (meters). 

He suffered only minor injuries to his left arm, Avalos said.

Accidents have been common on this train line. In August 2024, a young man wearing headphones was struck and killed by a cargo train while trying to cross the tracks.

AFP
Written By

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.

You may also like:

Business

Digital payment systems operate largely out of sight, but they form critical infrastructure that supports millions of transactions every day.

Tech & Science

The guiding principles of good AI practice in drug development are a first step of a renewed EU-US cooperation.

News

The Trump administration issued a series of executive actions that upended global health and humanitarian programs around the world.

Life

The review considered national crash data, trauma-centre toxicology studies, and enforcement trends.