Friday, August 30, 2013

The World Scores killed in Indian train fire


INDIA-TRAIN-ACCIDENT-FIRE

THIRTY-TWO people were killed yesterday when an overnight fire ripped through a coach of an express train as it carried sleeping passengers to the southern Indian city of Chennai. 

  The accident, on a long-distance service from New Delhi, occurred in the early hours of the morning near the town of Nellore in Andhra Pradesh state with an electrical short-circuit seen as the most likely cause.
Images showed dozens of rescuers, survivors and crowds of onlookers milling around as the blackened and twisted bodies of victims, some burnt beyond recognition, were lifted out and laid in rows alongside the railway line.
Family members of the victims wailed and screamed, while other dazed survivors sat around quietly with their belongings.
"I woke up when people were rushing into our compartment, I was in S-10 which was attached to the S-11 coach that caught fire," passenger Shantanu, who gave only one name, told NDTV.
"There was smoke all around. We tried to open the emergency window, people jumped out of it."
The central government press office said that 32 people had lost their lives and 25 had been injured, with 500,000 rupees offered to the families of the deceased.
Nellore chief district official B. Sreedhar said preliminary investigations suggested a short circuit near a toilet had triggered the blaze, while Railway Minister Mukul Roy said an investigation was underway.
"Nothing can be excluded and nothing can be said without an investigation," Mr Roy said shortly before rescue officials wrapped up their nearly 12-hour search for bodies.
The train was travelling at 110km/h when it passed through Nellore station, where staff noticed the fire and informed the railway authorities.
The burning carriage was quickly detached from the rest of the train which prevented the fire from spreading.
India's accident-prone rail network is still the main form of long-distance travel in the huge country despite fierce competition from private airlines.
While new shiny airport infrastructure is springing up, the Indian railways - a much-romanticised legacy of British colonial rule - often appear stuck in a time-warp.
There were two fatal accidents this May alone, including a collision that killed 25 people near the southern city of Bangalore. Four passengers also died after a train derailed in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

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