Top of page
Travel

Blind man killed by train after falling off platform in Tokyo

Train Station, Tokyo

An investigation is being launched after a man with vision disability was killed by a train after he fell off the edge of a train station platform in Tokyo.

On November 29, at Toyocho Station, Tokyo Metro Tozai Line in Koto Ward, Tokyo, a man with vision disability fell off the platform and was hit by a train and died. The Metropolitan Police Department said that he was in his 60, living in Edogawa Ward.

According to the Tokyo Metro, the camera installed on the platform showed the man holding a white cane but never touching the ground, and even at the edge of the platform, he fell without stopping about it.

Also, another train was parked on the other side of the platform, and a group of blind people who surveyed the site said the man might have misidentified that the train was parked at his platform.

According to the Tokyo Metro, the guards on the platform immediately noticed the fall and pressed the emergency stop button, but it was too late.

The installation work for platform doors was underway at the site, and operation was scheduled to begin in February next year.

You might also like

A man in a wheelchair on a lift of an accessible vehicle A man in a wheelchair on a lift of an accessible vehicle

Cook government boosts accessible on-demand transport

In a significant boost for accessible on-demand transport in the State’s…

a woman in wheelchair getting off from an accessible taxi a woman in wheelchair getting off from an accessible taxi

Ireland unveils €7M grant scheme for supporting taxis

Minister for Transport Darragh O’Brien has confirmed on Monday the…

blind person reading the braille book blind person reading the braille book

India’s Telangana state to introduce braille textbooks

The Telangana government announced plans to introduce Braille textbooks in…

wheelchair user traveling by train wheelchair user traveling by train

Transport subsidy maintained for disability community

The Government will make changes to ensure the continued viability…