Early official report on Lisbon funicular accident delayed

Lisbon’s transport company Carris’ workers stand next to excavations in the railway at the site of the Gloria funicular accident after the wreckage was removed in Lisbon on September 5, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 05 September 2025
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Early official report on Lisbon funicular accident delayed

  • The report was originally set to be made public on Friday
  • Eleven foreign nationals were among the 16 people killed when one of Lisbon’s popular funicular trains crashed

LISBON: Portuguese authorities have delayed until Saturday the release of their initial findings on what caused the fatal derailment of one of Lisbon’s famous funicular trains, which killed 16 people.
The report was originally set to be made public on Friday. But a spokesman for the GPIAAF air and rail accident investigations bureau told Portugal’s Lusa news agency late on Friday: “It is not possible to publish the report today.”
It was now expected to be released “sometime Saturday afternoon,” the spokesman said.
The report was only to give very early findings on the circumstances of the accident, which struck on Wednesday, with a more detailed preliminary report due “probably within 45 days,” the chief police investigator, Nelson Oliveira, said on Thursday.
Eleven foreign nationals were among the 16 people killed when one of Lisbon’s popular funicular trains crashed.
Three Britons, two South Koreans, two Canadians, one Frenchwoman, one Swiss man, one American and one Ukrainian were killed alongside five Portuguese, police said.
Eyewitness accounts described the wagon speeding down the steep street before derailing at a slight bend and crashing into a building at around 6:00 p.m. local time (5:00 p.m. GMT) on Wednesday.
In a Thursday press conference alongside Oliveira, judicial police chief Luis Neves had said the investigation was not ruling out any potential causes.
At least 11 foreigners were among the injured — two Germans, two Spaniards, a Frenchwoman, an Italian, a Swiss national, a Canadian, a South Korean, a Moroccan and a Cape Verdean, emergency services said.
Local media speculation about the cause of the accident has mentioned ruptured security cables and maintenance work overseen by Lisbon’s public transport operator Carris.
But a daily inspection conducted on the morning of the tragedy indicated a smoothly operating system.
The derailed wagon was removed from the street early on Friday.


First charges in Philippine flood control scandal target ex-lawmaker, officials

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First charges in Philippine flood control scandal target ex-lawmaker, officials

  • Rage over so-called ghost infrastructure, believed to have cost taxpayers billions of dollars, has been building for months
  • Construction firm owners, government officials and lawmakers have been accused of pocketing funds for substandard projects
MANILA: Philippine prosecutors filed on Tuesday the first criminal charges in a sweeping corruption scandal over bogus flood control projects, promising “many” more indictments in the case that has prompted public ire and protests.
Rage over so-called ghost infrastructure, believed to have cost taxpayers billions of dollars, has been building for months, ever since President Ferdinand Marcos put the issue center stage in a July address after weeks of deadly flooding.
Scores of construction firm owners, government officials and lawmakers in the archipelago country have been accused of pocketing funds for substandard projects.
On Tuesday, the ombudsman’s office unveiled charges against former congressman Elizaldy Co, public works officials and members of a construction firm over their ties to a “grossly” substandard road dike in Oriental Mindoro province.
The charges include falsification of documents, misuse of public funds and graft law violations.
“Public funds were meant to protect communities from flooding, not to enrich officials or private contractors,” ombudsman spokesman Mico Clavano told a press briefing.
He said the department was acting on the first case submitted by an independent commission, with more in the preliminary investigation stage.
“This is the first of many cases that will be filed in court,” he said.
The announcement comes a day after Iglesia ni Cristo (INC), a church which has historically been a powerful voting bloc with ties to the Duterte political dynasty, concluded back-to-back rallies in Manila that drew hundreds of thousands of people.
The rallies saw INC leaders allude to “emerging evidence” in the case, and featured videos that Co. – who has gone into hiding – released from abroad, accusing Marcos of masterminding the corruption.
While it was Marcos who pledged to identify the guilty and name names in his July speech, the ensuing furor has enveloped friend and foe alike.
On Monday, the Marcos administration saw two cabinet members, executive secretary Lucas Bersamin and budget director Amenah Pangandaman, step down after being linked to flood-control fraud.
The president’s congressman cousin, Martin Romualdez, resigned as House speaker in September after being implicated.
At Monday’s INC rally, Senator Imee Marcos, the president’s sister and a key ally of his arch-foe Vice President Sara Duterte, took to the stage to accuse him of drug use, saying it had impaired his judgment.
“His addiction became the reason for the flood of corruption, the lack of direction and very wrong decisions,” she said.
President Marcos’s son Sandro fired back on Tuesday, slamming the accusations as “not only false, but dangerously irresponsible.”