LONDON — Seven people were killed and more than 50 injured when a tram derailed while rounding a tight curve in a rainstorm in south London Wednesday, police said.

Investigators said the train, which tipped over on its side, apparently was going faster than permitted.

British Transport Police initially said five people had died, but later raised the death toll to seven.

Police arrested the 42-year-old tram driver on suspicion of manslaughter.

Emergency workers labored for hours to free five people wreckage of the two-carriage tram tipped over next to an underpass in the Croydon area.

The Rail Accident Investigation Branch said the tram derailed as it was negotiating a sharp curve with a speed limit of 12 miles per hour.

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“Initial indications suggest that the tram was traveling at a significantly higher speed than is permitted,” it said in a statement.

Passenger Martin Bamford, 30, said the train speeded up and “everyone just literally went flying.”

“There was a woman that was on top of me … I don’t think she made it at all,” Bamford said outside Croydon University Hospital, where he was treated for rib injuries. “She wasn’t responsive. There was blood everywhere.”

Bamford said the driver told him that “he thinks he blacked out.”

Liam Lehane of the London Ambulance Service described many of the people hurt as “walking wounded” but said others suffered serious injuries.

London’s fire department said eight fire engines and four rescue units were among the first responders to the Sandilands tram stop after the morning accident. They were equipped with heavy lifting and cutting tools, together with breathing apparatus and floodlighting.


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