A young man crashed onto train tracks and suffered terrible head wounds during the morning rush hour. The 27-year-old victim tumbled down at Subang Alam station around eight in the morning. Emergency crews raced to the scene after getting the distress call. Good samaritans dragged the injured man off the dangerous rails before firefighters arrived. Eight rescue workers rushed from Shah Alam station with medical equipment and emergency vehicles.
The fire department team reached the accident spot just nine minutes after the alarm sounded. Medical crews treated the badly hurt victim right at the station platform. Health ministry doctors took over his care when they showed up later. Railway officials confirmed the man had wandered onto the restricted track area without permission. Emergency responders worked fast to save his life and clear the scene.
The dramatic rescue operation shut down train services for more than two hours. Passengers faced major delays across the entire Kelana Jaya rail line. Trains from Putra Heights had to stop early at Alam Megah station instead of continuing their normal routes. Services from Gombak also terminated at the same location before turning around. Normal operations finally returned just after half past ten that morning.
The fire department team reached the accident spot just nine minutes after the alarm sounded. Medical crews treated the badly hurt victim right at the station platform. Health ministry doctors took over his care when they showed up later. Railway officials confirmed the man had wandered onto the restricted track area without permission. Emergency responders worked fast to save his life and clear the scene.
The dramatic rescue operation shut down train services for more than two hours. Passengers faced major delays across the entire Kelana Jaya rail line. Trains from Putra Heights had to stop early at Alam Megah station instead of continuing their normal routes. Services from Gombak also terminated at the same location before turning around. Normal operations finally returned just after half past ten that morning.