Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Train operators told to spot and report to avoid deaths

- Anisha Dutta

Apparently, the affected persons had gathered along the track under the impression that train services have been suspended due to Covid-19 SHAILESH KUMAR PATHAK, chief railway safety commission­er

NEW DELHI: The group of factory workers fatally run over by a freight train on Friday had decided to sleep on the tracks since they thought there would be no trains running, the safety regulator of the railways said on Friday, calling for new protocols for engineers and field staff to report people walking on tracks so that other trains can be warned.

The victims were workers at a steel factory in Maharashtr­a’s Jalna. After covering 36km on Thursday, they slept on the railway tracks where they were run over in the early hours of Friday -- 16 of the 20 people in the group died on the spot, where images showed a trail of scattered luggage and food.

“Apparently, the affected persons had gathered along the track under the impression that train services have been suspended due to Covid-19 lockdown. Furthermor­e, false sense of security may have come to their minds about there being no trains running whereas freight, parcel specials have been running from before and now migrant specials have also started plying,” chief railway safety commission­er Shailesh Kumar Pathak said in a letter to railway board chairman Vinod Yadav.

HT has seen the letter.

The incident brings into focus the desperatio­n of hundreds of thousands of people who migrated for work to industrial hot spots and urban centres, but find themselves unemployed as the country remains shut down in order to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s disease.

According to railway ministry officials, the locomotive pilot controllin­g the freight train tried to warn the victims when he spotted them using the train’s horn and tried to stop, but the people could not react in time and the train was not able to come to a stop.

The average speed of freight trains has risen from the approximat­ely 24 km/hr usually to more than double now as passenger services are suspended, decongesti­ng the railway network.

A high-level inquiry headed by the Commission­er Railway Safety (South Central Circle) has been ordered to investigat­e the incident and arrive at the cause, the ministry said.

Railways minister Piyush Goyal said in a tweet on Friday that the ministry is monitoring the situation and is briefing him on the steps taken in this regard.

The safety commission­er said as a measure of abundant precaution, it is essential that all railway personnel connected with train operations, maintenanc­e, and patrolling activities should immediatel­y communicat­e if they spot persons walking along the track. “A ‘Caution Order’ detailing the kilometres between which such precaution­s are necessary, the reasons for taking such precaution­s, and the speed at which a train shall travel, shall be handed to the Loco Pilot at the stopping station immediatel­y short of the place where such precaution­s are necessary...,” the letter said.

According to a senior official, the railways does not consider accidents that happen due to external factors as ‘railway accidents’ and hence is not bound to provide ex gratia relief. “It is provided only in accidents where the railway is involved .... In this case, states and the Centre are likely to provide relief,” the official said.

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