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Five people were injured when a train derailed in Switzerland following an avalanche on Monday morning, police said after a frantic effort to reach trapped passengers.
Several carriages were forced off the line near the village of Goppenstein, in southwestern Valais canton, at around 7am. Police said an avalanche may have crossed the tracks shortly before the train passed through.
Eight mountain rescuers, two ambulances and a helicopter were brought in to help evacuate the 29 passengers on board. One person was taken to the hospital in nearby Sion, while four others were treated for injuries at the scene.
Only last week, authorities warned there was a high risk of avalanches in the canton, amid a period of heavy snowfall across the Alps.
At least four off-piste skiers, including two British citizens, have been killed in avalanches in the French Alps in recent days.
Were you affected? Contact james.reynolds@independent.co.uk

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Rescuers were on hand this morning to evacuate passengers stuck on the train (Police Valais)
Valais police said that all passengers had been safely evacuated from the Bern-Lötschberg-Simplon (BLS) AG regional train by midday as they launched a probe to pin down the cause of the accident.
A spokesperson for railway company earlier told 20 Minuten that the train derailed “due to an avalanche that came down in the Stockgraben area”.
BLS said that other services on the Frutigen-Brig line would be suspended until at least tomorrow morning. Snow still covered the tracks around the train as emergency services cordoned off the scene today.
The train derailed between Goppenstein and Hohtenn as it emerged from a tunnel during its journey south from Spiez to Brig.
Swiss monitors last week warned that there was a high risk of an avalanche in Valais amid a period of heavy snowfall and harsh winds.

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Images show an apparent avalanche on the tracks on Monday (Valais Police)
The Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (WSL) raised its threat level to four, the second highest on its scale, on 11 February.
It warned that a fresh layer of snow was settling on an older, weak layer, making avalanches more likely in many areas.
The warning was still in place across swathes of the country on 16 February.
In the midst of the European ski season, at least four skiers in the Alps have been killed by avalanches in recent days.

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Police believe an avalanche may have crossed the tracks before the train passed through (Valais Police)
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Valais Police said last week that an avalanche had closed the Ferden–Goppenstein–Steg road (pictured) amid heightened risk of avalanche (Police Valais)
Two people were killed in Saint-Agnes and Motgenevre last week while off skiing off piste, authorities said. Two more off piste tourers were killed near Saint-Veran earlier this month.
At least 66 people have died in avalanches this European ski season, according to the European Avalanche Warning Services.
The organisation, which forecasts risk, says that snow avalanches claim an average of 100 lives in Europe every year.