rail passengers have launched a campaign to prevent disruption during work to electrify the Glasgow-to-Edinburgh rail line.

 

Railfuture (Scotland) claimed work at the tunnel at Winchburgh in West Lothian, where a key stage of the project will take place, would close the line.

It says the process could take up to three months, during which time no trains could run and with no suitable alternative routes available for the six passenger trains which currently pass through it each hour.

It said 20,000 passengers used the route each day, along with those travelling from the capital to Stirling, Dunblane and elsewhere.

A spokesman said: "Closing the Winchburgh Tunnel before building the Almond Chord is akin to sending central Scotland back to the dark ages."