Thirty-four people, including 11 women and a child died and
about 50 others injured Tuesday in a head-on collision between two
passenger trains in Hoshiarpur District of Punjab State in north
India, the Press Trust of India reported.
The collision between the Jammu Tawi Ahmedabad Express and
Jalandhar Pathankot Diesel Multiple Unit trains occurred near
Mansar village between Mirthala and Bangar railway stations in the
Jalandhar-Pathankot railway section.
While railway sources put the toll at 34, Punjab Chief Minister
Amarinder Singh said in the state assembly that 50 people have died
in the mishap that occurred around noon.
"The collision took place after both the trains were given the
green signals on the single line Jalandhar-Pathankot section of the
Ferozepur division of the northern railway," PTI quoted local
sources as saying.
While the local train Diesel Multiple Unit (DMU) was cleared
from the Bangara railway station, the Ahmedabad bound express train
was given the go ahead from Chak Kalan railway station.
Drivers of both the trains were among the dead, a spokesman of
the northern railway said.
The injured persons have been admitted to a civil hospital at
Mukerian and the Army Hospital, Pathankot.
Railway medical and relief teams have been rushed to the spot
and rescue operation was on with the help of the army.
Three coaches of the DMU and one of the express train along with
the two engines were badly damaged in the collision.
Railway commissioner (safety) has ordered an inquiry into the
accident.
The accident raises questions about the safety of rail travel in
India, a country with one of the largest railway networks in the
world.
India runs almost 14,000 trains daily and its railway network
carries almost 13 million passengers a day.
(Xinhua News Agency December 15, 2004)