Lumo train passengers' panic after emergency stop

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Lumo at Newcastle Central
Image caption,

The Rail Accident Investigation Branch was notified after a Lumo train came to a sudden halt

Rail passengers have complained of being thrown from their seats and hit by falling luggage after a train came to a sudden stop.

The driver of the 08:20 from Newcastle to King's Cross hit the emergency brake near Peterborough, operator Lumo said.

Passenger Neuma Domingos said she had a panic attack and hurt her leg and Lumo apologised for any distress caused.

Police said 15 people had minor injuries and the Rail Accident Investigation Branch had been informed.

Lumo said all travellers had been rerouted and the train was taken out of service for safety checks with later journeys cancelled.

"Regrettably there has been a knock-on effect for passengers on the 12:09 from King's Cross and the return journey at 18:52 from Edinburgh, both of which have been cancelled," Lumo said in a statement to the BBC.

Image source, Neuma Domingos
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Neuma Domingos said she twisted her leg when the train came to a sudden halt

Ms Domingos was returning to London for a hospital appointment after visiting family in Newcastle.

The King's College London student told the BBC: "Everything was fine until very abruptly we started veering to the right. All things fell on the floor. I was leaning on to the woman next to me and she almost fell out of her seat.

"And then very rapidly the train swung from side to side, heavily on to the left side all the luggage fell at this point. I hit my knee, people were gasping, a couple of people cried out - it was like really bad turbulence on a plane."

She added: "I'm still pretty shocked by everything, surprised and my leg still hurts. A suitcase hit a man's head. I can't get that image out of my head. The suitcase slowly moving and then bang. It happened right in front of me."

Image source, Billie Rainer
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Billie Rainer said the movement of the train felt much worse than plane turbulence

Billie Rainer, 25, said she was left "shaken" by the incident after she caught the train from Newcastle to visit friends in the capital.

"The train was swinging from side to side as it went around the corner very fast," she told the BBC.

"I felt like a massive jolt and I was lifted out of my seat. I wasn't injured but other people were, by falling items. A woman was limping because she'd been hurt.

"The train tipped to the side a bit, then loads more. My suitcase fell to the floor and a couple of people fell off chairs.

"After the train swung from side to side it came to a massive halt and stopped at Peterborough station for an hour and a bit.

"It did feel like the train had approached the corner way too fast. It was so much worse than plane turbulence."

Image source, Ellie Foster
Image caption,

Ellie Foster tweeted a picture of her dented suitcase after it fell from a shelf

Ellie Foster, 24, who lives in Canterbury was on the train with her partner Luke after visiting family over the Easter holidays.

She tweeted about the "very scary" moment when she saw "luggage and people flown all over the train".

She shared a photograph of a dent in her suitcase after it fell from a shelf.

"We were approaching Peterborough and we were sitting on the right side of the train and the train sort of jolted to the left causing all the luggage to come down from above our head. The train then wobbled and came to a stop and we were left waiting for over an hour," she said.

"In that instance you don't really know what's happening. I've obviously grabbed on to something because I've hurt my two little fingers, nothing serious, but I was bracing for the impact because I honestly thought the train was going to crash. I feel fine now.

"The ladies on the train said they were just waiting for the signal to change, there was no reason for what happened and they just hoped everyone was ok."

'Sudden halt'

British Transport Police (BTP) said it received a report of an emergency stop at 11.53 BST.

Officers met the train at King's Cross and talked to passengers who were offered medical assistance by paramedics at the station, BTP said.

Lumo is owned by the travel business FirstGroup and runs trains on the East Coast Main Line between London King's Cross and Edinburgh Waverley. The route started in October and all Lumo trains on the service are electric.

The operator said it was "very sorry for any distress the sudden stop may have caused".

"Such events can be jolting for passengers and we took great care to check on everybody's welfare. There was some falling luggage and naturally many people will have felt the effects of the sudden halt."

It added: "A full investigation is now under way and we are supporting our driver and the Rail Accident Investigations Branch to determine precisely what happened."

It said all passengers were entitled to a full refund through the normal delay repay channels.