Toronto Star

Signalling system error caused fatal train crash

- KRUTIKA PATHI, SHEIKH SAALIQ AND ASHOK SHARMA

The derailment in eastern India that killed at least 275 people and injured hundreds was caused by an error in the electronic signalling system that led a train to wrongly change tracks and crash into a freight train, officials said Sunday.

Authoritie­s worked to clear the mangled wreckage of the two passenger trains that derailed Friday night in Balasore district in Odisha state in one of the country’s deadliest rail disasters in decades.

An Odisha government statement revised the death toll to 275 after a top state officer put the number at over 300 on Sunday morning. The officer spoke on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to speak to reporters.

Jaya Verma Sinha, a senior railway official, said the preliminar­y investigat­ions revealed that a signal was given to the high-speed Coromandel Express to run on the main track line, but the signal later changed, and the train instead entered an adjacent loop line where it rammed into a freight loaded with iron ore.

The collision flipped Coromandel Express’s coaches onto another track, causing the incoming Yesvantpur-Howrah Express from the opposite side also to derail, she said.

The passenger trains, carrying 2,296 people, were not overspeedi­ng, she said. Trains that carry goods are often parked on an adjacent loop line so the main line is clear for a passing train.

Verma said the root cause of the crash was related to an error in the electronic signalling system. She said a detailed investigat­ion will reveal whether the error was human or technical.

The electronic interlocki­ng system is a safety mechanism designed to prevent conflictin­g movements between trains. It also monitors the status of signals that tell drivers how close they are to a next train, how fast they can go and the presence of stationary trains on the track.

“The system is 99.9-per-cent error free. But 0.1-per-cent chances are always there for an error,” Verma said. To a question whether the crash could be a case of sabotage, she said “nothing is ruled out.”

At one of the hospitals nearly 15 kilometres from the site, survivors spoke of the horror of the moment of the crash.

Pantry worker Inder Mahato said he heard a loud bang when the Coromandel Express crashed into the freight. The impact caused Mahato, who was in the bathroom, to briefly lose consciousn­ess.

Moments later when he opened his eyes, he saw through the door that was forced open people writhing in pain, many of them already dead.

For hours, Mahato, 37, remained stuck in the train’s bathroom, before rescuers scaled up the wreckage and pulled him out.

“God saved me,” he said, lying on the hospital bed while recuperati­ng from a hairline fracture in his sternum. “I am very lucky I am alive.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada