Reuters - At least 119
people were killed and more than 150 injured when an Indian express train
derailed in northern state of Uttar Pradesh on Sunday, with the toll set to
rise amid a scramble to locate survivors.
Police
officials said people were still missing as authorities tried to determine what
caused 14 carriages of the train traveling between the northeastern city of
Patna and the central city of Indore to suddenly roll off the tracks in
Pukhrayan, 65 km south of Kanpur city.
Authorities
said they were checking the condition of the tracks but would need to look
further before concluding the cause of the derailment, India's deadliest rail
tragedy since more than 140 died in a 2010 collision in West Bengal.
Desperate
survivors searched for family members and some tried to enter the damaged carriages
to rescue relatives and collect belongings, said senior railway official Pratap
Rai.
"We are
using every tactic to save lives but it's very difficult to cut the metal
carriages," he said from the accident site.
Kanpur
district magistrate Kaushal Raj Sharma told Reuters that 119 people were
confirmed dead, while 78 of the injured remained in hospital, four of them in a
critical condition.
With rescue
teams still looking for victims amid the wreckage, the toll from the derailment
could rise to become India's worst rail tragedy in this century.
In what was
probably India's worst rail disaster, a train plunged off a bridge and into a
river in 1981 in Bihar state, killing an estimated 500 to 800 people.
India's
creaking railway system is the world's fourth largest. It runs 11,000 trains a
day, including 7,000 passenger trains carrying more than 20 million people. But
it has a poor safety record, with thousands of people dying in accidents every
year, including in train derailments and collisions.
Suresh Prabhu,
India's railways minister, said in a tweet that the government would
investigate the causes of the derailment and promised accountability with the
"strictest possible action", as well as compensation for the affected
passengers.
The Kremlin
said Russian President Vladimir Putin had contacted Prime Minister Narendra
Modi and "passed on words of sympathy and support to the relatives and
loved ones of the dead and wished a fast recovery of the injured."
MANGLED
CARRIAGES
The packed
train, operated by the government, derailed in the early hours of Sunday when
more than 500 passengers were sleeping, survivors said.
TV footage
showed mangled blue carriages, with crowds of people and police on top of the
wreckage searching for survivors. One carriage was almost lying on its side and
appeared to have been completely torn apart.
Rescue
officials with yellow helmets worked their way through the crowds, carrying
victims from the wreckage as teams struggled to remove the derailed wagons from
the tracks, one of the main transportation routes for goods and passengers in
northern India.
"Suddenly
I could feel that the carriage was overturning. I immediately held the metal
rod near the bathroom door," said Faizal Khan, who was traveling with his
wife and two children, all of whom survived the accident.
Another
survivor, Rajdeep Tanwar, said. "I can see bodies lying near the tracks,
everyone is in a state of shock. There is no water or food for us."
Buses were
being pressed into service to help passengers complete their journey, said
police additional director general Daljeet Singh Choudhary.
Rescue teams
said they would conclude the search operation before night fall and resume it
on Monday. Nearby villagers set up temporary kitchens and erected tents for
survivors and officials.
PUSH TO
MODERNIZE
Modi, who
started out selling tea outside a train station, has promised to modernize India's
railways and build high-speed lines befitting Asia's third-largest economy.
His government
has pledged to replace old tracks and upgrade security infrastructure but
little progress has been made so far. More than 90 percent of the railways'
revenues are spent on operational costs, leaving next to nothing for
modernization.
By some
analyst estimates, the railways need 20 trillion rupees ($293.34 billion) of
investment by 2020, and India is turning to partnerships with private companies
and seeking loans from other countries to upgrade its network.
Last year,
Japan agreed to provide $12 billion in soft loans to build India's first bullet
train.
On Sunday,
Modi took to Twitter to express his condolences.
"Anguished
beyond words on the loss of lives due to the derailing of the Patna-Indore
express. My thoughts are with the bereaved families," Modi said.
Reuters




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