The Guardian (USA)

Three arrested in India over train crash that killed nearly 300 people

- AFP in New Delhi

Three men have been arrested in India over a triple-train collision that killed nearly 300 people last month, one of the worst rail accidents in the country’s history, police have said.

The train crash in eastern Odisha state occurred when a packed passenger train was mistakenly diverted on to a loop line and hit a stationary goods train.

The derailed compartmen­ts then struck the carriages of another fast train, the Howrah Superfast Express from Bengaluru, which was passing in the opposite direction.

Three railway employees were charged with culpable homicide and destructio­n of evidence in a case filed against them on Thursday, a statement from the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion said.

The statement identified the men as two signal engineers and one technician employed with Indian Railways, without giving further details.

The two passenger trains were carrying more than 2,000 passengers between them when the collision occurred.

Carriages had flipped over entirely and rescue workers scrambled to pull out survivors trapped in the mangled wreckage, with scores of bodies laid out under white sheets beside the tracks.

Relatives spent days combing through possession­s and looking at postmortem pictures of those killed in the crash to identify their loved ones.

At least 850 others were injured in the collision.

Days after the accident, India’s railway minister, Ashwini Vaishnaw, said the crash was the result of an issue with signalling and that the “people responsibl­e for the accident” had been identified.

He did not give further details at the time, saying he did not wish to preempt a government investigat­ion into

the disaster.

Train services resumed 51 hours after the crash, and Vaishnaw was seen folding his hands in prayer as he saw the first train cross the accident site.

Indian Railways, the world’s fourthlarg­est rail network, runs about 14,000 trains daily with 8,000 locomotive­s over a vast system of tracks around 40,000 miles (64,000km) long.

Carrying more than 21 million passengers each day, according to official figures, the network is under enormous pressure in a country that has recently become the world’s most populous.

India has invested huge sums of money in recent years to upgrade its rail network, run express trains, build modern railway stations, lay new tracks and install electronic signalling systems.

The June crash ranks as India’s third-worst and the deadliest since 1995, when 300 people were killed after two express trains collided near Agra, home of the Taj Mahal.

 ?? Photograph: Punit Paranjpe/AFP/Getty Images ?? A packed passenger train collided with a goods train after mistakenly being diverted.
Photograph: Punit Paranjpe/AFP/Getty Images A packed passenger train collided with a goods train after mistakenly being diverted.

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