A survivor’s tale from the Tempe train disaster: Stavroula Kapsali’s harrowing experience
Interview by Georgia Kriebardi
“I’m from Mouzaki, Karditsa. I’ve relied on trains for years. That Saturday, I booked my usual spot in the last carriage; it’s a habit born from a belief that danger strikes at the front,” Kapsali begins. “On that particular evening, as we left Larissa around 23:10, I remember a lady tidying up the canteen just before I settled in, expecting a mundane journey.”
However, the trip was anything but ordinary. “When the collision occurred, it was abrupt. The carriage jolted backwards. Sparks flew past the windows, and I thought it was a mechanical fault. I could never have anticipated a collision.”
Panic ensued inside the train. “Passengers scrambled, some kicked at windows to escape. A female firefighter helped open a door. When we finally got out, the sight was horrific. The second and third carriages were engulfed in flames down a slope.”
Kapsali’s initial reaction was disbelief. “My first call was to my sisters, informing them of a derailment – I couldn’t fathom the reality of a collision.”
The aftermath was chaotic. “Ambulances rushed past us, focusing on more critical sites. It was on the bus away from the wreckage that I learned it was a collision, not just a derailment.”
Reflecting on the incident, Kapsali struggles with survivor’s guilt. “I was safe, relatively unscathed, because of my choice in seating. Meanwhile, around me, there was unimaginable suffering.”
The disaster has left Kapsali with deep-seated anger towards those in charge. “People in critical positions failed, and their failures cost lives. I can’t tolerate the excuses any more. This wasn’t just an accident; it was negligence amounting to murder.”
Today, Kapsali advocates for accountability. “Every responsible party should face justice. It’s the only way forward.”
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