Freight train derails in Japan's Hokkaido, disrupts services
A freight train derailed in Japan's northernmost prefecture of Hokkaido on Saturday, disrupting some passenger and commercial railway services, local media reported.
The emergency brake was applied while the freight train was traveling between stations in a town near Hakodate, a southern city in the prefecture, and the driver confirmed some cars had derailed, Kyodo News said, citing the operator JR Freight.
Five of the train's 20 freight cars came off the tracks. The driver was uninjured, the report said.
The freight train had departed from Nagoya in central Japan and was bound for Sapporo, the capital of Hokkaido.
Following the incident, local train services were suspended from the morning and express train services between Hakodate and Sapporo were also halted.