=> MEHRABPUR: The number of deaths in Karachi Express | Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF)

Pakistan Press Foundation

=> MEHRABPUR: The number of deaths in Karachi Express

MEHRABPUR: The number of deaths in Karachi Express tragedy is reported to have risen to at least 58 on Wednesday morning with at least 120 other people wounded.

Karachi Express train packed with holiday travellers derailed at Tuesday-Wednesday night near Mehrabpur, officials said.

The Karachi Express night train was on its way to Lahore when most of its carriages came off the rails and rammed into each other near the town of Mehrabpur, officials said.

A senior railway official ruled out sabotage, saying a faulty track was believed to have caused the crash.

“According to our update, there are 58 bodies and 122 wounded. Forty of them are in critical condition,” said Anwar Kazmi, an official with the Edhi ambulance service.

The train crashed at about 2.30 a.m. (2130 GMT on Tuesday) and many of those on board were heading home to celebrate Eid al-Adha on Friday.

Rescue workers were trying to reach people still trapped in two badly damaged carriages and officials said the toll of dead and injured could rise.

Luggage, train wheels and other wreckage littered the scene in farmland about 400 km (250 miles) north of Karachi.

A reporter from an international news agency at the site heard passengers crying out from inside a damaged carriage. “Please, get us out,” one begged.

Military and railway officials at the scene said they did not know the cause of the crash but the general manager of Pakistan’s railway system, Asad Saeed, ruled out sabotage.

“There’s a joint in the track which is welded and that has broken. It shrinks in winter. There are many forces on the track and sometimes this joint breaks,” Saeed said.

One passenger reported hearing a loud rattling sound just before the crash. Another railway official said 14 of the train’s 18 carriages had come off the rails and four of them were completely destroyed.

Mohammad Iqbal, an injured passenger lying on track, said the train had suddenly begun rocking violently. “I don’t know what happened. All of a sudden the train started jerking about and we fell down,” Iqbal said.

“It was all darkness. We were lying on the track for three to four hours in the dark.”

About 130 people were killed in July 2005 when a crowded passenger train rammed into another at a station, also in Sindh province, and a third train hit the wreckage.
Source: The News
Date:12/19/2007