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Why India lags behind in rail safety – and where it goes from here

It’s been a week since India witnessed one of the worst rail accidents in the nation’s history. Two passenger trains collided with a parked freight, killing nearly 300 people and injuring hundreds more. Rescue crews have gone home and train services have resumed, but the country is still reeling. 

As the shock wears off, attention has shifted to safety standards in the state-run Indian Railways, which ferries millions of people every day. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Leaders in India have been pouring money into modernizing the country’s massive rail system. But as a recent accident in Odisha shows, modern doesn’t always equal safe.

Rail accidents of Friday’s magnitude are rare, and India has improved rail safety in recent decades. Yet thousands die in railway accidents every year, and globally, India still “ranks very low” when it comes to rail safety, says Alok Kumar Verma, who retired from the Indian Railways Service of Engineers in 2016.

Many blame India’s poor track record on chronic overcrowding and congestion, as well as lax attitudes toward safety. The accident is also humbling for the government’s much-touted rail modernization drive, which has spent billions building high-altitude bridges and state-of-the-art stations. But experts say leaders have prioritized flashy projects over systemwide improvements. 

Mr. Verma says those improvements can’t wait. For long journeys, the rail system is the only affordable option for millions of Indians, especially poor migrant workers like many of those who died in Friday’s accident. “It is the lifeline of the nation,” he says.

It’s been a week since the east Indian state of Odisha witnessed one of the worst rail accidents in the nation’s history. Rescue crews have gone home and train services have resumed, but the country is still reeling. 

As the shock wears off, attention has shifted to safety standards in the state-run Indian Railways, which ferries millions of people every day. Many opposition leaders have called for the resignation of India’s railways minister, Ashwini Vaishnaw.

The accident is also humbling for the much-touted rail modernization drive by the administration of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. In recent years, the government has built high-altitude bridges, inaugurated state-of-the-art stations, and even announced India’s first bullet train. But Alok Kumar Verma, who retired from the Indian Railways Service of Engineers in 2016, calls these projects “sheer propaganda.” In reality, he says, the railway network is being neglected, with disastrous consequences.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Leaders in India have been pouring money into modernizing the country’s massive rail system. But as a recent accident in Odisha shows, modern doesn’t always equal safe.

What went wrong in Odisha?

Last Friday, near Bahanaga Bazar station in Odisha’s Balasore district, the Coromandel Express passenger train was routed onto the wrong track, causing it to collide with a parked freight train instead of passing it safely. The Coromandel Express hit the freight, which was carrying a heavy payload of iron ore, at 80 mph. The impact derailed many of the express train’s coaches, which then careened onto an adjacent line, hitting another passenger train that was heading in the opposite direction. 

The three-train pile-up killed nearly 300 people and injured about a thousand. Many victims’ bodies were damaged beyond recognition, and hospitals resorted to DNA tests to help relatives identify loved ones. 

Rafiq Maqbool/AP

Savita Devi shows a photograph of her husband, whose body she has been unable to identify after Friday’s train accident, at a hospital in Bhubaneswar, India, June 6, 2023.

Mr. Vaishnaw has said that “a change in the electronic interlocking system” used to guide train movement caused the accident, adding that details would be revealed only after a full investigation by the commissioner of railway safety. It’s not clear whether the accident resulted from human error, technical glitch, or sabotage. What is clear is that this is India’s most severe rail accident since two trains collided near Agra in 1995. 

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