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Train crash leaves 11 dead

Almost 100 hurt in latest rail calamity to hit Egypt

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A train accident north of Cairo left 11 people dead and 98 others injured, Egypt’s health ministry said, in the latest rail calamity to hit the North African country.

The ministry, in an updated toll, said that “11 people were killed and 98 others injured in a train accident in Toukh”, a small farming town in the fertile Nile Delta about 40km outside the capital.

Egypt’s Cabinet said in a statement that four carriages of the train heading from Cairo to Mansoura, a Delta city, came off the tracks.

More than 50 ambulances took the injured to three hospitals in the province, the health ministry said.

The ministry added that investigat­ors have been sent to determine the accident’s cause.

President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi tasked the military’s engineerin­g authority on Sunday with investigat­ing the latest incident, which came on the heels of a deadly train crash last month that left at least 20 people dead.

Authoritie­s have not yet provided a reason for Sunday’s derailment.

A security source said the driver and other rail officials had been detained for questionin­g. The ministry said 14 people who sustained minor injuries were released from a hospital close to the accident site.

Egyptian rail disasters are generally attributed to poor infrastruc­ture and maintenanc­e.

At least 20 people died and 199 were injured last month in a train crash in the country’s south, according to the latest official toll, which authoritie­s have revised several times.

The prosecutio­n has alleged that the driver of one train and his assistant had both left the driver’s cabin when it crashed into another train.

Transport Minister Kamel el-Wazir – a former general named to the post after a deadly 2019 train collision – blamed the March crash on human error.

“We have a problem with the human element,” he told a TV talk show, where he pledged to put in place an automated network by 2024.

The African Developmen­t Bank announced earlier this month a US$170mil (RM701mil) loan to improve safety on Egypt’s rail network.

The bank said the money would be used “to enhance operationa­l safety and to increase network capacity on national rail lines”.

“The planned upgrades are expected to benefit low-income Egyptians, about 40% of the population, who rely on trains as an affordable mode of transport,” it said in a statement.

One of the country’s deadliest train crashes came in 2002, when 373 people died as a fire ripped through a crowded train south of Cairo.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Off the tracks: People gathering at the site where train carriages derailed in Qalioubia province, north of Cairo.
— Reuters Off the tracks: People gathering at the site where train carriages derailed in Qalioubia province, north of Cairo.

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