MADRID, 13 March 2004 — Commuters sobbed, lit candles and left flowers yesterday at Madrid’s Atocha station, a normally bustling railway hub turned sadly quiet after the devastating terrorist attacks.
Trains had to roll past two of the bombed-out shells of the four trains hit in the attacks on Thursday. The hulks were still on the track just outside the station.
“I came with a lot of fear,” said a tearful Isabel Galan, 32, who traveled from the suburb of Fuenlabrada. “I saw the trains and I burst into tears. I felt so helpless, felt such anger.” As she talked, her makeup ran.
A day after the deadly bombings, Atocha was eerily quiet. Few people spoke. Most read newspapers or listened to radios.
All trains arriving at the terminal had black sashes of mourning stuck to the windows of the drivers’ cabins. An AP reporter aboard a train that rode past the wrecks saw passengers observe absolute silence, as classical music played over loudspeakers. Three policemen patrolled the train.
When it reached the hulks, travelers got up to look out the window and cried. Some covered their mouths and shook their heads. One middle-aged man looked away, his eyes filling up with tears. No one would comment.
RENFE, the state railway company, said rail traffic was down by 30 percent during yesterday’s morning rush hour.
Four of Atocha’s six regional and commuter rail lines were open to traffic and most trains were running as normal. Trains on the route hit by the bombs were redirected to the city’s other main terminal at Chamartin in the north of the city.
“There are less passengers. We can see people are affected, “said RENFE official Jose Martinez, 43. “I don’t normally look at the passengers, but today I did.”
Many of the trains were half empty entering the terminal, which normally sees tens of thousands of workers, students and shoppers arriving during the morning rush hour. “I had no choice but to come by train,” said Galan, a clothes-shop clerk in downtown Madrid.
Inside and outside the station, people placed candles, flowers and handwritten messages on the ground. One message read: “We’re with you. Today, they killed me and every Spaniard.”
A protest rally was called for noon at the station, one of many to be staged throughout Spain. RENFE announced free public transport in and around Madrid between 4 p.m. and 11 p.m. (1500-2200 GMT) to help people attend the demonstrations. Throughout Madrid, many people decked their apartment balconies with Spanish flags or white banners, each with black ribbons attached.
Families continued to arrive at hospitals in search of their missing loved ones, hoping they might be among the injured. A total of 367 people remained hospitalized, 45 of them in critical condition, a TV report said.
At a makeshift morgue set up at a convention center on the city’s outskirts, Spanish Red Cross official Miguel Angel Rodriguez explained the grim procedure when people arrive seeking news of missing relatives.
“We don’t have a list of the dead. Only the injured. If the name they give us is not among the injured, they are taken into a small room to be with the rest of their family and they are offered the services of a psychiatrist,” Rodriguez said.
One train was attacked in Atocha, another as it entered the station and two others were bombed at stations just outside Madrid.
Although the train bombed in Atocha had been removed, the tracks were still covered with glass and charred pieces of personal belongings such as gloves, shoes and bags.
The wreckage of the two trains hit at Atocha lay on tracks just outside the station, with the sides and roofs of many carriages blown through. The bombs blasted all fittings, including the seats, from many of the carriages, leaving just the bare twisted and charred metal structure with cables hanging loosely.
Blood stains on the tracks and bloodied clothing could be seen scattered about the ground. Spain’s national papers were filled with gruesome photographs and chilling accounts from survivors and eyewitnesses.
Isabel Pinto at El Pozo station told the El Mundo newspaper that she “saw people escaping from the train asking, ‘Have I got eyes?’ ‘Have I got a face?’ ‘How am I?’ ‘Is any of me missing?’ They were like zombies.”
The newspaper likened the attack, just three days before Spain’s general elections, to the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States, running a cartoon of an airliner flying into a skyscraper-like ballot box.