A newly-built section of a
high-speed rail line has collapsed in China's central Hubei province
following heavy rain, state media reports.
The line was set to open in May and had been in use for test runs..
About 300m of the embankment in Qianjiang city collapsed last
Friday, Xinhua news agency says. News of the incident only emerged on
Monday.
China has embarked on an ambitious project to expand its high-speed rail network across the country.
But this is just the latest incident to tarnish the reputation of the new network, says the BBC's Michael Bristow in Beijing.
The collapsed embankment is part of the Hanyi High Speed
Railway which links the provincial capital Wuhan with Yichang to the
west.
Hundreds of workers have been sent to the site to repair the damage. Photos from a local newspaper show workers removing rails and sleepers from the scene.
Heavy rain apparently caused the foundations of the rail
line, which forms part of the trunk route of the national high speed
rail network, to give way.
But one report from the local official news portal says the owner of the railway has rebuked initial local reports, saying they are "untrue".
"It is part of the process to rectify quality problems
spotted on the embankment in pre-launch tests," the railway company
claims.
Some internet users in China, however, are not convinced by
the explanation. They ask if there are any flaws in the construction
process.
On microblogging site Sina Weibo, a user from Yichang says,
"thank goodness that it collapsed early enough, or it would be yet
another tragedy if it happened after launch."
"I was longing for a more convenient journey home," says another user from Wuhan, "now I'd better have no expectations."
China's leaders have praised rail network plans, but it has not been free from controversy, our correspondent says.
Forty people died last summer in a crash on a rapid train
line in eastern Zhejiang province and the entire high speed scheme has
been dogged with reports of corruption.
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