FIVE
KILLED AS INDIAN PASSENGER, GOODS TRAINS COLLIDE
At least five people were
killed when an express passenger train and a goods train collided Monday in
India’s West Bengal state, derailing three passenger carriages, police said.
Images on Indian broadcasters showed tangled wreckage of
carriages flipped on their side, and one thrust high into the air precariously
balanced on another.
West Bengal’s Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee called the
crash “tragic” in a post on social media. Banerjee said the crash took place in
the Phansidewa area of Darjeeling district when the Kanchenjunga Express train
was hit by a goods train.
Railways minister Ashwini Vaishnaw said the “injured are
being shifted to the hospital”.
ATN learnt that the incident is the latest to hit India’s
creaking rail network, which carries millions of passengers each day. India has
one of the world’s largest rail networks and has seen several disasters over
the years, the worst in 1981 when a train derailed while crossing a bridge in
Bihar state, killing an estimated 800 people. In June last year, a three-train
collision killed nearly 300 people in Odisha state. In recent years India has
been investing huge sums of money to upgrade the network with modern stations
and electronic signaling systems.
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