Portugal observed a national day of mourning on Thursday following the tragic derailment of Lisbon’s iconic Gloria funicular, which left 17 people dead and 21 others injured.
The accident happened on Wednesday evening in one of the city’s busiest tourist districts, when the historic yellow funicular veered off its tracks on a steep section near Liberty Avenue and crashed into a building. Among the injured were at least 11 foreign nationals, including citizens of Germany, Spain, France, Italy, Switzerland, Canada, South Korea, Morocco, and Cape Verde. Fifteen victims died at the scene, while two others succumbed to their injuries later.
In response, Lisbon authorities suspended operations of the city’s three other funiculars pending safety inspections. Emergency teams worked late into the night, with grim scenes of the mangled carriage against a building wall. Witnesses described the impact as devastating, with one onlooker saying the funicular “collapsed like a cardboard box.”
Officials at home and abroad expressed condolences. Lisbon’s mayor, Carlos Moedas, called the tragedy unprecedented for the city. Prime Minister Luis Montenegro said it brought “grief to families and dismay to the country,” while European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen offered sympathies to the victims’ relatives. Prosecutors have opened an investigation, though the transport operator Carris insisted all maintenance protocols had been followed, with the last general inspection conducted in 2022 and checks as recently as 2024.
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