54 minutes ago
Olivia Ireland
The accident happened early on Thursday at a level crossing north of Copenhagen.

54 minutes ago
Olivia Ireland

Reuters
Two trains have collided head-on on a level crossing north west of Copenhagen, leaving four people critically hurt and 13 others needing hospital treatment, officials say.
The trains were travelling on a line linking the towns of Hillerød and Kagerup in the North Zealand area of north-east Denmark.
Tim Ole Simonsen of the Greater Copenhagen fire department was unable to say what led to the crash but told Danish TV that all the injured had been taken to hospital by air or by ambulance.
Local mayor Trine Egetved said she was deeply shaken by the accident.
Public broadcaster DR showed images of two yellow and grey trains, both with visible damage to the front, facing each other in a wooded area.
Frederiksborg Fire and Rescue said they had been alert to the accident at about 06:30 local time (05:30 BST) on Thursday.
Egetved, who is mayor of the Gribskov municipality, said those with critical injuries had been flown to the National Hospital in Copenhagen.
"The local track is used by many Gribskov residents, workers and students," she wrote on Facebook.
Rail accidents are rare in Denmark and one expert suggested one of the train drivers had ended up on the wrong line by over-riding a stop signal as the train left a local station. The Gribskov line is not thought to have been updated with an automated safety system.
Trine Egetved told public broadcaster DR that it was shocking that two trains could collide head-on "and we must ensure it never happens again".

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has appointed the heads of the Security Service of Ukraine departments in Kyiv and the Kyiv region, as well as in the Kherson and Kharkiv regions.

Intercept released by Ukraine´s Intelligence suggests Russian commanders threaten and beat foreign recruits to force them into near-suicidal assaults.
A woman suspected of poisoning a soldier on behalf of Russian intelligence agencies has been detained in the Zakarpattia region.
Polish fintech company ZEN.com, which acquired 100% of the shares of insolvent JSC First Investment Bank (PINbank), does not plan to enter the Ukrainian banking market with lending services in the near future.