Australian among injured in Swiss train crash

An Australian has been injured in a train derailment in the Swiss Alps which sent three train cars off the track.

View of a train after it was derailed by a landslide near Tiefencastel, in a mountainous part of eastern Switzerland (AAP)

View of a train after it was derailed by a landslide near Tiefencastel, in a mountainous part of eastern Switzerland (AAP)

An Australian is among 11 people who were injured when three train cars derailed in the Swiss Alps after being hit by a landslide.

The severity of the Australian's injuries are not yet known, with police confirming that five people were seriously injured while a further six sustained only slight injuries.

One carriage slid down a steep slope, saved from a ravine only by large trees.

The accident occurred in a deep wooded valley between Tiefencastel and Solis, south-east of Zurich in the canton (state) of Graubuenden.

Police said about 140 people were on board at the time of the accident, about lunchtime. The landslide followed heavy rains over the past 24 hours.

They injured included eight Swiss and two Japanese citizens as well as the Australian, police said.

The train had set off from the ski resort of St. Moritz heading north toward Chur, Graubuenden's administrative capital.

Police initially said the train ran into a landslide on the track, but later revised their comments to say a landslide hit the train as it travelled between two tunnels along the side of a valley.

One train car slid about 10 metres down the slope before being stopped by the trees.

Air rescue helicopters helped with the recovery effort since the crash site was not near a road.

By mid-afternoon, everyone had been evacuated, with uninjured passengers taken to Tiefencastel and put on buses.

The train is operated by Rhaetische Bahn, which runs narrow-gauge routes in Switzerland's mountainous south-eastern corner that are popular with tourists. The line is expected to remain closed for two days.

Switzerland's rail system is considered among the safest and most efficient in the world, despite the country's challenging terrain.

Accidents are rare, although in 2010 the popular Glacier Express tourist train derailed in the Alps in southern Switzerland, killing one person and injuring 42 others.


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