A person has died after an incident at a busy train station.

The British Transport Police (BTP) said they were called to Motherwell railway station at around 7am on Wednesday, October 30, following reports of a casualty on the tracks.

Emergency crews, including paramedics, raced to the station.

However, sadly a person was pronounced dead at the scene.


READ MORE: Busy train line closed due to ongoing police incident


The force revealed they were not treating the incident as suspicious. A report will be prepared for the Procurator Fiscal.

It comes after we reported how ScotRail said police were dealing with an incident between Motherwell and Lanark.

Due to this, the rail firm said all lines in the area had been shut.

Meanwhile, Network Rail said they were working with 999 teams dealing with the incident.

They said services on the West Coast Main Line in both directions faced disruption due to the incident.

ScotRail said the line between the two stations has since reopened.


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A spokesperson for the British Transport Police said: “Officers were called to Motherwell railway station at around 7am today (October 30) following reports of a casualty on the tracks.

"Paramedics also attended, however, sadly a person was pronounced dead at the scene.

"The incident is not being treated as suspicious and a report will be prepared for the procurator fiscal.”

A spokesperson for ScotRail added: "Following the emergency services dealing with an incident earlier today between Motherwell and Lanark all lines have now reopened.

"Train services between Glasgow Central and Edinburgh via Carstairs are returning to normal but some services may still be cancelled, delayed or revised."

 

 

Meanwhile, a Network Rail spokesperson said: "We're in the process of reopening the West Coast Main Line at Motherwell, following a police incident earlier.

"Thanks for your patience if your journey's been affected this morning."

 

 

The Samaritans helpline is free to call 24 hours a day on 116 123. The charity is also running a small-scale pilot web chat service.