IT has emerged that one of the trains that was involved in Sunday’s rail crash in Salisbury had run through a red light.

The South Western Railways train coming from London Waterloo to Honiton failed to stop at the red light outside the Fisherton Tunnel.

It ran alongside a Great Western Railways train travelling from Portsmouth Harbour to Cardiff, with both trains being derailed.

The two trains approached the tunnel on different tracks but then collided near the entrance.

Andrew Hall, Deputy Chief Inspector, Rail Accident Investigation Branch, said: "A team of RAIB inspectors arrived on site on Sunday evening and were joined yesterday by additional inspectors and our support team.

"We are working alongside partner organisations including the Office of Rail and Road (ORR) and BTP. Our investigation is progressing well.

"Yesterday our focus was on evidence retrieval, we have been working with Police scene officers to examine the train.

"We have also undertaken a close examination of the track and signalling in the area and started to talk to those involved. Analysis of downloads from the trains’ data recorders, electronic data from the signalling system and CCTV imagery is ongoing.

"From the initial evidence we have collected, we know that that the passage of the Great Western train travelling from Eastleigh across Salisbury Tunnel Junction was being protected by a red signal.

"At this junction, trains coming from Eastleigh merge with those from Basingstoke, so the South Western service coming from Basingstoke was required to stop at that signal.

"Unfortunately, it did not stop and struck the side of the Great Western train at an angle such that both trains derailed and ran alongside each other into the tunnel just beyond the junction.

"Initial evidence indicates that the South Western train driver applied the brakes as it approached the junction and the red signal, but the train was unable to stop before passing the signal.

"This evidence suggests that the most likely cause of this was wheel slide, almost certainly a result of low adhesion between the wheels and the track. We are continuing to pursue this as a line of investigation amongst others.

"In consultation with other parties, we continue to work with the railway recovery engineers to ensure that the site is handed back in the shortest time possible. We intend to begin releasing parts of the site back to Network Rail later today.

"Later this week we’ll be releasing the initial findings of the investigation, these will be publicly available on our website."