Portuguese officials investigating Wednesday’s deadly funicular crash in Lisbon say a cable along the railway’s route snapped, but the rest of the mechanism was functioning properly.
“After examining the wreckage at the site, it was immediately determined that the cable connecting the two carriages had given way,” the preliminary report by the national transport safety office said.
The brakeman tried to apply emergency brakes but failed to prevent the derailment, the investigators add.
Sixteen people died and about 20 were injured when the upper carriage of the iconic yellow Glória funicular railway crashed into a building.
Five of those killed were Portuguese along with three Britons, two South Koreans, two Canadians, an American, a Ukrainian, a Swiss and a French national, police said.
The 140-year-old funicular is designed to travel up and down Lisbon’s steep slopes, and is an important form of transport for the city’s residents - and a popular tourist attraction.
Although the brakeman activated the pneumatic brakes and a manual brake when the cable came loose, it is not clear whether another, automatic brake came on as it was supposed to, the report states.
It says the carriage was travelling at about 60kmph when it hit the building.
The seven-page report, which stresses that it gives no “valid conclusions” as to why the crash happened, says it is still unclear how many people were travelling on the carriage, which can hold up to about 40 passengers.
Portugal’s Prime Minister Luis Montenegro described the incident as “one of the biggest tragedies of our recent past”.