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India rescue ends as focus turns to cause of worst train crash in decades

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BAHANAGA: Indian rescue workers completed operations on Sunday after the country’s deadliest rail crash in more than two decades, with signal failure emerging as the likely cause of an accident that killed at least 275 people.


The death toll from Friday’s crash was revised down from 288 after it was found that some bodies had been counted twice, said Pradeep Jena, chief secretary of the eastern state of Odisha.


The tally was unlikely to rise, he told reporters. “Now the rescue operation is complete.”


Nearly 1,200 people were injured when a passenger train hit a stationary freight train, jumped the tracks and hit another passenger train passing in the opposite direction near the district of Balasore.


More than 900 people had been discharged from hospital while 260 were still being treated, with one patient in critical condition, the Odisha state government said.


India’s Railway Board has recommended that the case be handed over to the Central Bureau of Investigation, Railway Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw said.


Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the scene on Saturday to talk to rescue workers, inspect the wreckage and meet some of the injured.


“Those found guilty will be punished stringently,” Modi said.


Preliminary investigations indicated the Coromandel Express, heading to Chennai from Kolkata, moved out of the main track and entered a loop track — a side track used to park trains — at 128 kmph, crashing into the freight train parked on the loop track, said Railway Board member Jaya Varma Sinha.


That crash caused the engine and first four or five coaches of the Coromandel Express to jump the tracks, topple and hit the last two coaches of the Yeshwantpur-Howrah train heading in the opposite direction at 126 kmph on the second main track, she told reporters.


This caused those two coaches to jump the tracks and result in the massive pileup, Sinha said.


The probe is now focused on the computer-controlled track management system, called the “interlocking system”, which directs a train to an empty track at the point where two tracks meet. — Reuters


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