India: At least 288 dead and 850 injured in worst train collision in decades

A collision between three trains left at least 288 dead and 850 injured on the evening of Friday June 2 in eastern India, and the emergency services are trying to extricate the many travelers trapped under the metal carcasses of the wagons. AFP journalists on the spot saw overturned wagons, rescuers working tirelessly to extract survivors from the wreckage, and many corpses covered in white shrouds lying next to the tracks at the scene of the tragedy, near Balasore, in about 200 kilometers from Bhubaneswar, the state capital of Odisha.

Odisha State Fire Service Director General Sudhanshu Sarangi told AFP that the death toll has reached 288. “Relief operations continue on site, and they will not be over for several hours”, he added. A senior representative of the regional government, Pradeep Jena, for his part, told AFP that around 850 people had been hospitalized.

A relentless parade of ambulances overnight delivered injured people to Bhadrak district hospital, where the bloodied and shocked survivors are being treated in overcrowded conditions.

Trapped under heaps of scrap metal

According to Amitabh Sharma, the director of Indian Railways, two passenger trains were “actively involved in the accident”. A third train, a freight convoy, was parked at the site where the tragedy occurred, he told AFP without providing further details.

“The number of casualties on the ground or injured is very difficult to assess at the moment”he explained, as many passengers likely remain trapped in the rubble.

The collision took place near Balasore. (DIBYANGSHU SARKAR/AFP) (DIBYANGSHU SARKAR/AFP)

A survivor told reporters he was asleep when the crash happened, and awoke to find himself under a dozen other passengers, before crawling out of his compartment with injuries to his chest. neck and arm. “We have prepared all the major public and private hospitals, from the accident site to the state capital, in order to take care of the injured”said SK Panda, a spokesman for the regional authorities.

He added that 75 ambulances and “many buses” were dispatched to the scene to transport both injured passengers and survivors. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi for his part said “afflicted”. “My thoughts are with the bereaved families. May the injured recover quickly”tweeted the head of government, adding that he had spoken with the Minister of Railways, Ashwini Vaishnaw, to make ” Update on the situation “.

The latter announced that he was going to go to the scene of the accident urgently, and that the army had been mobilized to help. “We will requisition all the arms necessary for the rescue operations”he said on Twitter.

Relief at work (DIBYANGSHU SARKAR / AFP)
Relief at work (DIBYANGSHU SARKAR / AFP) (DIBYANGSHU SARKAR / AFP)

Many disasters in the past

India has experienced several other rail disasters in the past, but safety on the rails has improved significantly in recent years thanks to massive new investments and technological upgrades.

The deadliest railway accident in this country is that of June 6, 1981 when, in the state of Bihar (east), seven wagons of a train which was crossing a bridge, fell into a river, the Bagmati, making between 800 and 1,000 dead. On August 20, 1995, the collision between two trains, about forty km from the city of Agra (north) which houses the Taj Mahal, had killed at least 305 people: a signalman had given the green light to the express train without s to realize that the way was not clear.

Another particularly deadly recent accident: on November 20, 2016, the Patna-Indore express train, on board which were 2,000 people, derailed early in the morning in a rural area of ​​the state of Uttar Pradesh (north), in a time when most of its passengers were sleeping. The disaster left 146 dead and around 180 injured. Since the turn of the century, 13 rail accidents, including at least three caused by terrorist attacks, have each claimed more than 50 lives.

Source : Nouvelobs

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