News24 | Luxury train ferrying tourists from Pretoria derailed in collision with locomotive in Zimbabwe

10 hours ago 2

View from inside a luxury train carriage on board a Rovos Rail train. (Andrew Thompson/News24)

View from inside a luxury train carriage on board a Rovos Rail train. (Andrew Thompson/News24)

Bulawayo, Zimbabwe – A South African luxury train carrying foreign tourists to Zimbabwe for Easter collided with another locomotive on Friday, derailing carriages and injuring several people on board, the operating company and a local rail employee said.

Four crew members of the Rovos Rail train, which was going from Pretoria to the tourist hotspot of Victoria Falls, were hurt in the collision with a freight train in Zimbabwe, the luxury service's spokesperson Liezl Maclean told AFP. 

READ | Derailed: Prasa awards two R18bn signalling contracts to non-compliant entities

"There were no injuries in terms of the guests that we are aware of," she told AFP, adding some were under observation.

But a staff member at the local rail service, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was unauthorised to speak to media, put the total number of injured at 18.

He said 14 of them were admitted to Gwanda Provincial Hospital, and four to Mater Dei in Bulawayo. 

READ | Court sets aside Transnet's R8bn locomotive contract with US giant

He did not specify how many were passengers or crew, nor if the count included any injured on the freight train.

Images shared on social media showed rescue workers carrying a man on a stretcher through a gap in the mangled roof of the wreckage.

The incident in Zimbabwe's southern town of Gwanda involved the Rovos Rail train and a freight train operated by the Beitbridge Bulawayo Railway service. 

A private luxury train owned by Rovos Rail of South Africa, headed to Victoria Falls and carrying 47 international tourists, collided with a goods train owned by the Beitbridge Bulawayo Railway (BBR) service outside Gwanda earlier today.I have been repeatedly saying on this… pic.twitter.com/B7ojLjPL0b

— Hopewell Chin’ono (@daddyhope) April 18, 2025

At least 47 tourists were on the Rovos Rail train at the time of the accident, according to Maclean.

It was not immediately clear what had caused the accident. 

READ | Paint them white: how Brazil is keeping trains on track

Established in 1989, Rovos says it offers "bespoke train safaris through the heart of Africa", with trips from Cape Town to Tanzania's coastal city of Dar Es Salaam.

The Victoria Falls package features a three or four night, 1 400km journey going from Pretoria to Zimbabwe's second city of Bulawayo.

Read Entire Article
Progleton News @2023