Evert Elzinga / EPA
Rescue workers evacuate injured passengers at the scene of a train collision near Amsterdam on Saturday.
AMSTERDAM -- Almost 125 people were injured, many seriously, when two Dutch commuter trains crashed head-on in Amsterdam on Saturday [April 21, 2012], police said.
There were no immediate reports of fatalities, but of those injured, 13 suffered major injuries while 43 or 44 were badly injured, a spokesman said. About 70 suffered minor injuries.
A trauma helicopter was used to bring the injured to hospital, a spokesman for railways group NS said.
The trains did not serve Schiphol international airport, the NS spokesman added, but the accident disrupted airport train service.
Some people were lifted from the wreckage by cranes while others were led away from the crash site in protective wraps to dozens of waiting ambulances, while police cars and fire trucks stood by.
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