Only 51.5% of long-distance trains were on time last month, Germany’s Süddeutsche Zeitung reported, and state-owned railway company Deutsche Bahn later confirmed the figures to dpa.
Only 51.5% of long-distance trains were on time last month, Germany’s Süddeutsche Zeitung reported, and state-owned railway company Deutsche Bahn later confirmed the figures to dpa.
No - because the do not count trains that either never started their journey, or that stopped midway through and turned around. It’s a really sorry trick to make the statistic look “better”.
“It’s not delayed, it just… Jever got there!”