Rzepin train disasterThe Rzepin train disaster was an alleged railway disaster reported to have occurred near Rzepin, Poland, on 9 July 1952.[1][2][3] According to some reports, about 160 Soviet soldiers died in the accident.[1][2][3] The incident was not confirmed by official Polish or Soviet sources, but was reported by Western press agencies. The day after the crash the West German Deutsche Presse-Agentur cited "unanimous reports" from "independent eye-witnesses".[4] The following week the Associated Press in Berlin cited "well-authenticated reports reaching Allied officials" there,[5][1] and the United Press Associations named the West Berlin Railway Workers Union as a source,[6] along with "allied authorities".[7] The incident is said to have happened on the east side of the Oder river, between Boczow and Rzepin.[4][1] EventsThe train was a "Blue Express"[6] travelling through Poland on the Frankfurt Oder to Brest-Litovsk leg of the Berlin to Moscow route.[6] It was carrying Red Army troops on leave to Russia.[6][4][1] It left the tracks and crashed into a lake.[4][1] CauseAccording to Allied sources as reported by the Associated Press, the accident was caused by an unnamed high-ranking officer (a general) loading his automobile on a flatcar in the middle of the train, against the advice of railway staff.[1] The train consequently derailed on a curved section of track, and fell into a lake.[1] Robert A.D. Ford, a diplomat at the Canadian embassy in Moscow, travelled the line the following week and saw a heavy military and police presence at stations en route. He attributed this to the disaster being blamed on Polish guerrillas.[8] This cause was also cited by the United Press agency, which stated "Allied officials" had received reports that anti-communist Polish Partisans had sabotaged the tracks.[7] The Blue Express train, which was used by Soviet officials, had previously featured in accusations by the Soviets of attempted anti-communist sabotage.[6][9] From 20 July 1952, the CIA noted that the Blue Express was rerouted through Czechoslovakia, possibly due to sabotage activity in Poland.[10] MemorialIn 2009, an initiative to erect a monument in honor of the victims was made, but due to the lack of confirmation of the authenticity of the accident, the initiative was not implemented.[11][unreliable source?] See also
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