Spain: Grenade-shaped Belt Buckle Halts Trains in Madrid, Barcelona

An official with Spain's National Police said the alert was ended after agents in Madrid confirmed that the suspicious object in the suitcase of a female passenger who had travelled on a high-speed train from Barcelona didn't pose any danger.

The grenade-shaped belt buck which led to an unprecedented chaos | (Photo credits: Twitter@Claire_Phipps)

Madrid, November 7: A hand grenade-shaped belt buckle in the suitcase of a train passenger triggered major disruptions on Wednesday on rail services in Spain's two main cities, prompting station evacuations before police declared the incident a false alarm. An official with Spain's National Police said the alert was ended after agents in Madrid confirmed that the suspicious object in the suitcase of a female passenger who had travelled on a high-speed train from Barcelona didn't pose any danger.

The official was not authorised to be named in media reports. "Everything returns to normal," said the National Police in a brief tweet explaining that disruptions in the long-distance and commuter train stations in the Spanish capital had been due to the false alarm. Ukrainian Soldier Hands Friend 'Live' Grenade After a Fight and Runs Away Leaving Him Petrified.

Security scanner image that caused the chaos:

The search in the capital followed police searching high-speed trains and railway tracks in the country's second largest city, Barcelona, after the central Sants station's security scanner identified an object shaped like a possible explosive device inside a suitcase. According to the police in the Catalonia region which tweeted an image of the scanned suitcase, the object turned out to be a belt buckle.

Spain's railway infrastructure managing company, ADIF, which handles security in train stations, didn't immediately respond to questions about why the suspicious case was allowed onto the train. An AP reporter at the scene in Barcelona saw long queues of passengers waiting for rail traffic to resume.

A homegrown extremist cell killed 16 people in August last year in Barcelona and a nearby coastal resort in consecutive vehicle and knife attacks that were later claimed by the Islamic State group.

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