City
Epaper

Technical error halts all trains in Sweden

By IANS | Updated: December 8, 2022 11:20 IST

Stockholm, Dec 8 All train traffic in Sweden came to a standstill due to a technical error.Just ...

Open in App

Stockholm, Dec 8 All train traffic in Sweden came to a standstill due to a technical error.

Just before 6 p.m. on Wednesday, trains were ordered to proceed slowly to the next station after phone contact between traffic control centres and trains was interrupted, Xinhua news agency quoted Swedish Daily Dagens Nyheter (DN) as saying in a report.

Bengt Olsson, press manager at the Swedish Transport Administration, told DN that it was a precautionary measure, as train drivers are warned over the phone should a vehicle get stuck at a railroad crossing or a person end up on the track.

"We have no idea what caused the error, but it means we had to stop the traffic," Olsson said.

He also said that it was too early to draw any conclusions about what had caused the error.

DN said it was not yet known when the problem would be resolved.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Swedish daily dagens nyheterswedenXinhuaStockholmBengt olsson
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalElisabet Lann: Sweden Health Minister Collapses During Live Press Conference; Video Surfaces

InternationalSweden Mass Shooting: 3 Killed, Multiple Injured in Uppsala Attack

InternationalSweden Shooting: Five People Shot at School in Orebro

InternationalMajor UK Railway Stations Hit by Cyber Attack; Network Rail Suspends Wi-Fi Service

TechnologyMpox Outbreak 2024: Thailand Detects First Suspected Case of New Clade 1b Strain After Sweden

International Realted Stories

InternationalBangladesh: Three people die due to dengue, fatalities in 2025 rise to 198

InternationalSouth Korea's ex-President snubs special counsel summons again in martial law probe

InternationalFiji introduces new policy to address staff misconduct in schools

InternationalSouth Korean President Lee, Japan's Ishiba agree to cooperate on shared social challenges

InternationalGerman lawmaker's former aide convicted for spying for China