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PA

Eurotunnel passengers forced to leave train beneath English Channel

Videos on social media showed holidaymakers walking through the alternate tunnel alongside the 50 kilometre rail route between Britain and France.

EUROTUNNEL PASSENGERS HAD to be evacuated from a train after it broke down beneath the English Channel.

They were transferred to a cargo train but complained of being stuck in the sub-sea tunnel for nearly five hours, citing issues with the replacement transport.

The initial breakdown late yesterday affected the 3.50pm Eurotunnel Le Shuttle service from Calais to Folkestone and led to hundreds of passengers being ushered into a service tunnel.

Videos on social media showed holidaymakers walking through the alternate tunnel alongside the 50 kilometre rail route between Britain and France, some with suitcases and dogs.

Meanwhile travellers in Calais were told to stay away from the terminal until 6am today, with pictures showing gridlock at the shuttle terminal late into yesterday evening.

A spokesman for Eurotunnel Le Shuttle said: “A train has broken down in the tunnel and we are in the process of transferring customers to a separate passenger shuttle via the service tunnel, to return to our Folkestone terminal.

“We apologise sincerely for this inconvenience.”

The spokesman added: “Due to the earlier train fault, we advise you not to travel to the terminal tonight.

“Please arrive after 6am tomorrow.”

EUT2 Passengers were transferred to another train Michael Harrison / Twitter/PA Michael Harrison / Twitter/PA / Twitter/PA

Michael Harrison, from Cranbrook, Kent, one of those on the evacuated train, told the PA news agency: “We got on the 3.50pm crossing, approximately 10 minutes in the lights went out and the train stopped.

“We were told they needed to investigate an issue with the wheels.

“It took approximately one and a half hours for them to investigate and obviously not find anything.

“They reset things and set off for another five minutes.

“It happened again at which time we waited a further couple of hours to decide they couldn’t see a problem but had to evacuate the train to another train.

“After further waiting we left the train through the emergency link tunnel to the service tunnel.

“We then walked approximately 10 minutes to a train in front of the stricken train.

“This was a bus carriage where we got transported to Folkestone.

“That train then stopped as it couldn’t get traction, presumably as it was long and had no weight on it.

“There were gasps of incredulity when that was announced.

“We finally arrived in Folkestone six hours after boarding.”

Journalist Bruce Atkinson, caught up in the delays at Calais, tweeted: “Sitting in the boarding queue at Calais with no idea how long we will be waiting. Been here 4 hours so far.” 

Sarah Fellows (37) from Birmingham, will have taken 18 hours to return home from a family holiday in France after the “utter carnage” of the evacuation.

She told PA: “The service tunnel was terrifying.

“It was like a disaster movie.

“You were just walking into the abyss not knowing what was happening. We all had to stay under the sea in this big queue.

“Fire and rescue were there.

“There was a woman crying in the tunnel, another woman having a panic attack who was travelling alone.

“They were expecting really older people to walk for a mile down the middle of a tunnel under the sea.

“It was utter carnage when we arrived in Folkestone as they hadn’t really prepared for us arriving.

“It just wasn’t organised of how to evacuate that train.

“I was panicking at one point and Border Force told us the tunnel had been evacuated one other time in the last 17 years, not recently.”

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Press Association
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