Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Traincrush­esmigrants­onwayhome

Group was walking from Maharashtr­a to MP, fell asleep on track; 16 killed

- Surendra P Gangan and Aroosa Ahmed

MUMBAI: Sixteen people were killed when they were run over by a freight train near Maharashtr­a’s Aurangabad early on Friday morning as they slept on train tracks after a long journey on foot in a desperate attempt to find transport to go back to their home towns hundreds of kilometres away in Madhya Pradesh.

The victims were in a group of 20 people who left Jalna for their villages the previous evening after deciding to no longer wait for their employer – a company running a steel factory – to pay their wages.these migrant workers did not have jobs, and sometimes food, for over a month as factories remained shut due to the nationwide lockdown in place to contain the spread of the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19).

“We tried to get passes for the special trains but did not get help from any of the authoritie­s. Finally we started walking at around 7pm on Thursday and slept on the train tracks. We were so tired that we could not even discuss about the risk of sleeping on the tracks,” Virendra Singh, one of the survivors, told local media at Aurangabad’s Ghati Hospital.

“The contractor had assured payment on May 7 but later said he was not in a condition to do so,” he said. The group had walked some 36kms, at first on the roads before they moved to the tracks to avoid being stopped by police.

Singh was one of the four survivors who slept on a clearing next to the tracks, while the others slept on the rails when a freight train with empty wagons for petroleum products ran them over around 5.20am. “Two of the others and I tried to warn the victims but were unable to awaken them on time,” he said.

District officials said they are now focussing on sending the bodies of the victims home by the special trains that they had been hoping to board.

“The case is being investigat­ed by the police, but our priority is sending the bodies back. They are being sent by a special Shramik train departing for Jabalpur on Friday evening,” said Sanjeev Jadhavar,residentde­putycollec­tor, Aurangabad.

Tens of thousands of people have been walking home from big cities and industrial hot spots after being laid off because of the lockdown in force since late March. There were reports that some others like the victims have been killed in road accidents.

While the victims of Friday’s fatal incident did not have the requisite documents to obtain a pass, the other reason why migrant workers have been making the punishing journeys on foot or bicycles is a reluctance by their home states to accept them.

Officials in Telangana have decided this week to scrap dozens of requests for special trains after destinatio­n states for such travellers did not give the necessary approvals to allow the journey.

The Union government has allowed special trains -- called Shramik trains -- to be requested if the origin as well as the destinatio­n states agree on the travel, which many regions fear could also fuel the spread of Covid-19.

A senior Railways safety official in Delhi said the victims in Friday’s accident had fallen asleep on the tracks believing there would be no train on the route. The engineer of the locomotive spotted the people and used the train’s horns, but was not able to stop on time.

Mokshada Patil, superinten­dent of police, Aurangabad rural, said investigat­ion was being carried out on the basis of the informatio­n given by the survivors.

“All of them were working at SRJ Steels in Jalna, about 35 km from the accident spot, and had started on Thursday evening. They were heading towards Aurangabad to check for any travelling facility back to their home state.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Police officers examine the railway track where migrant workers were run over in Aurangabad.
REUTERS Police officers examine the railway track where migrant workers were run over in Aurangabad.

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