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Portugal holds day of mourning as 15 dead in funicular derailment

September 4, 2025
1 min read
Portugal holds day of mourning as 15 dead in funicular derailment
Portugal holds day of mourning as 15 dead in funicular derailment
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Portugal is holding a day of national mourning after a funicular train derailed in Lisbon, killing at least 15 people in one of the capital’s most popular tourist spots.

The accident yesterday saw the yellow Gloria funicular veer off a steep stretch of tracks near Liberty Avenue and crash into a building.

Rescuers said a further 18 people were injured. The victims, including some foreign nationals, have all been recovered from the wreckage, according to the emergency services.

The Portuguese government said the country would observe a day of mourning today to commemorate the victims, whose identities were not immediately available.

LISBON, PORTUGAL - SEPTEMBER 03: Rescuers and firefighters operate at the scene after the Gloria funicular cable railway derailed in Lisbon, Portugal, 03 September 2025. At least 15 died in the derailment, with emergency services reporting that 20 were injured and others are still trapped at the sce
Rescuers confirmed a toll of 15 dead and 18 injured

Footage showed police and rescue personnel working into the night around the wreckage of the funicular lying on its side against a wall of the street.

A woman interviewed by the SIC television channel said the train, which can hold about 40 people, struck the building “with brutal force and collapsed like a cardboard box”.

Tourists and locals queue while waiting to board the cabin of Gloria Funicular (in 2023 in Lisbon, Portugal.
The Gloria Funicular is the city’s most famous having entered entered service in 1885

Lisbon Mayor Carlos Moedas called the incident “a tragedy that our city has never seen”.

A statement by the office of Prime Minister Luis Montenegro said it had “brought grief to… families and dismay to the country.”

Tánaiste Simon Harris said the Irish embassy in the city is ready to provide assistance.

European Union chief Ursula von der Leyen also offered condolences to the victims’ families.

Lisbon prosecutors said they were opening an investigation into the accident’s circumstances.


The city’s public transport operator said it had complied with “all maintenance protocols”.

“Everything was scrupulously respected,” Pedro Bogas, the head of Lisbon Carris, said at the site of the accident, adding that maintenance of the funiculars has been done by a contractor for the past 14 years.

General maintenance is carried out every four years and was last conducted in 2022, Carris said. Intermediate maintenance takes place every two years and was completed in 2024.

Tourists and residents alike use Lisbon’s funiculars to travel up and down the capital’s steep hills and the boxy yellow train is a common image on gift shop souvenirs.

The Gloria first entered into service in 1885 and was hooked up to electricity in 1915, according to the website of Portugal’s national monuments.

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