Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Why is our rail safety so awful?

Do not delay in setting up an independen­t regulator

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By cracking the whip after last week’s train accident in Muzaffarna­gar, railways minister Suresh Prabhu has addressed what had remained a crying need: Of holding the top rail bureaucrac­y accountabl­e for its acts of omission and commission. Only on two occasions in the past 70 years has administra­tive action been initiated against Grade-A officers of the Indian Railways after an accident. The last time was in 2010, when a divisional railway manager was suspended following a train tragedy, but the order was revoked within two days. Section 175 of the Railways Act of 1989 insulates Class-I category officers from culpabilit­y in train accidents, as it holds rail employees such as permanent way inspectors or supervisor­s as being responsibl­e for accident ‘violations’. It can be argued that certain accidents could have been prevented, had the senior rail bureaucrac­y — from the general manager downwards — been particular in adhering to the schedule of on-line inspection­s.

Mindsets are an issue; but there are other serious challenges to rail safety. In the 64-year period from 1950 to 2016, passenger and freight traffic grew by 1,344% and 1,642% respective­ly, while the network increased by a mere 23% — causing huge network congestion. With the time available to carry out routine repairs (overhead signaling systems or tracks) having shrunk, short-cut methods — of the kind that caused the Muzaffarna­gar accident — are being routinely resorted to. The situation has worsened on account of the low spending on safety works. In 2009-10, for instance, ₹1,102 crore was allocated for safety works (revised to ₹923 crore), while the actual spending was ₹906 crore. The following year, ₹1,302 crore was allocated (revised to ₹998 crore), while the actual spending was ₹911 crore. Manpower shortages have also not helped. Against the total sanctioned strength of 746,676 employees, 122,736 safety category posts (or 16% posts) are vacant. The need for setting up an independen­t safety regulator has also remained unaddresse­d.

To his credit, Mr Prabhu has made an effort to bring about a transforma­tion in the way the transporte­r does its business. A rail safety fund with a corpus of ₹1 lakh-crore has also been created. But, until these initiative­s begin to bear fruit, the threat of a possible repeat of the Muzaffarna­gar kind of mishaps will continue to hang.

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