Sainthia train collision


The Sainthia train collision occurred on 19 July 2010, at the Sainthia Junction railway station in Sainthia, India, when the Uttar Banga Express[1][2][3] collided with the Vananchal Express as the latter was leaving the platform. 66 people died as a result of the accident,[4] and 165 were reported injured.[5]

Sainthia train collision
Details
Date19 July 2010
02:00 (IST, UTC+05:30)
LocationSainthia Junction railway station, Sainthia, Birbhum, West Bengal
CountryIndia
OperatorIndian Railways
Incident typeRear-end collision
Statistics
Trains2
Deaths66
Injured165

Collision

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The collision occurred 191 km from Kolkata at 02:00 am (IST) when the Uttar Banga Express, travelling from New Cooch Behar to Sealdah, hit the BhagalpurRanchi Vananchal Express which was just leaving Sainthia railway station. The impact destroyed the 3 rear compartments of the Vananchal Express.

The injured were sent to hospitals in Sainthia and Suri.[5] The Home Minister stressed the need for a much faster response to such accidents.[6]

Investigation

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Railway officials initially described how there may have been something wrong with the drivers of the Uttar Banga Express, detailing how the train had passed through a red signal at high speed, with no evidence of a brake application and with no apparent attempt by the driver or co-driver to jump clear of the train cab before the collision. Both were found dead in the wreckage, still in their seats.[7] The possibility of the two drivers of Uttar Banga Express being drugged had triggered alarm in the railways.[8] However, the post mortem of the drivers at the Suri hospital did not show any evidence of drugs.[9] As a precaution, drivers and guards have been asked not to buy any food or drink at stations.[8]

Sainthia railway station was a scheduled stop for the express, but the train is believed to have passed over a bridge 1.2 km before the accident at three times the line speed.[10] The crew had taken charge of the train at Malda Town 5 hours before the accident, and had appeared fit and well to station staff during a previous unscheduled stop at Gadadharpur, 7 km ahead of the accident site.[11] The signalman in-charge at the station claimed to have heard the station master trying to alert the driver of the Uttar Banga Express via walkie-talkie, but got no response.[12]

The enquiry has found no fault with the train's brakes[10] although, the guard, when questioned said that he had applied the emergency brake after the driver did not respond to him on the walkie-talkie, but the brake failed.[13] Also there was no signal failure, the approach signal was red.[10] Probable causal factors found are the drugging of the drivers and not setting a diversion route when the Vananchal Express was standing at the platform.[8] It was too late to operate points and divert the train when the Uttar Banga Express was seen.[11]

The driver of the Vananchal Express, said that "even though the green signal was given at 1:54 a.m., we could start the train only at 2:01 a.m. because we had not received any signal from the guard".[8]

Compensation

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Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee has announced compensation of a total of ₹500,000 for the dead, ₹100,000 for the seriously injured, and ₹25,000 for minor injuries.[14]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Partha Majumdar, Priyanka Ray. "Press Availability Information". Indianrail.gov.in. Retrieved 21 July 2010.
  2. ^ S.Saha. "Train accident in Sainthia, West Bengal: Many dead,70 Injured". resultsfaq.com.
  3. ^ "7 DAYS AVAILABILITY INFORMATION". Indianrail.gov.in. Retrieved 21 July 2010.
  4. ^ Sainthia train mishap toll rises to 66Rediff News, 20 July 2010
  5. ^ a b 61 dead in India train crash
  6. ^ Blame game still on over Sainthia train crash IBN Live, 21 July 2010
  7. ^ Railways blame human error for mishap Hindustan Times, 19 July 2010
  8. ^ a b c d Diversion system not activated Duo on duty ‘booked off’ The Telegraph, 22 July 2010
  9. ^ Train accident probe focuses on drivers Asia News Network, 21 July 2010
  10. ^ a b c Railway grapples with driver riddle The Telegraph, 19 July 2010
  11. ^ a b West Bengal train collision: A 9-min, 7-km mystery Hindustan Times, 21 July 2010
  12. ^ Bengal train accident: 'Station master tried to alert driver' NDTV, 21 July 2010
  13. ^ Uttarbanga Express guard says emergency brake failed Hindustan Times, 22 July 2010
  14. ^ Rs 5 lakh, job to kin of dead in accident: Mamata Times of India, 19 July 2010
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