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Two local passenger trains collided head-on on April 23 on the Gribskov line linking Hillerød and Kagerup, north of Copenhagen, Danish authorities said.
The crash, reported just before 06:30 local time, injured at least 17 people, of whom five were described as critically ill; authorities said roughly 37–38 people were aboard the two trains.
All passengers were evacuated and no one was trapped, emergency services said.
Large rescue resources were deployed, including ambulances, helicopters and dozens of rescue workers (Reuters reported 18 vehicles and 47 personnel). Several injured passengers were airlifted to Copenhagen hospitals.
Police and the Accident Investigation Board have opened an extensive probe; it is too early to determine a cause.
Public broadcaster DR and some experts have noted the line is used by commuters and schoolchildren and may lack automated train protection systems, a point investigators are expected to examine.
Swedish authorities offered assistance but Denmark said local resources were sufficient.
The collision has prompted temporary closure of the line and emergency and transport authorities to set up support centres for passengers and relatives.
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Credible reports confirm the casualty count and location; independent observers highlight systemic gaps in automatic train-protection on regional lines, which could explain early speculation and is likely to prompt accelerated safety reviews and political scrutiny.




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