Pakistan train collision fatalities climb past 60

The list of the dead includes 12 unidentified people from the accident, which saw an express train collide into a derailed north-bound passenger train early on Monday.

Soldiers and railway workers remove wreckage to clear the track at the site of a train collision in the Ghotki district, southern Pakistan, late Monday, June 7, 2021
AP

Soldiers and railway workers remove wreckage to clear the track at the site of a train collision in the Ghotki district, southern Pakistan, late Monday, June 7, 2021

The death toll from a collision between two express trains in Pakistan has reached at least 63 as desperate efforts to search the crumpled cars for victims continues.

Pakistan Railways officials said on Tuesday that at least 63 people had died in the mishap as they issued two lists of the dead that included 12 unidentified people from the accident, which saw a north-bound passenger train derail early Monday before being struck minutes later by an express coming from the opposite direction.

More than 100 other people were injured in the accident. 

Cries for help pierced the night as passengers climbed out of overturned or crushed rail cars. The pleas continued to echo throughout the day at the scene in the district of Ghotki, in the southern province of Sindh.

Heavy machinery arrived to cut open some cars, and more than 15 hours after the crash, rescuers carefully removed wreckage as they looked for anyone who might remain trapped — though hopes were fading for survivors.

READ MORE: Taiwan in mourning after deadliest train disaster in decades

Around 1,100 passengers in two trains

The military deployed troops, engineers, and helicopters to assist.

The Millat Express train derailed, and the Sir Syed Express train hit it minutes later, said Usman Abdullah, a deputy commissioner of Ghotki. 

It was not immediately clear what caused the derailment, and the driver of the second train said he braked when he saw the disabled train but did not have time to avoid the collision.

About 1,100 passengers were aboard the two trains, rail officials said.

“The challenge for us is to quickly rescue those passengers who are still trapped in the wreckage," said Umar Tufail, a police chief in the district.

The death toll steadily rose through the day, and the chances of finding survivors were diminishing, said Rizwan Nazir, a district administration official.

Authorities brought in lights so rescuers could work through the night. Relatives of some of the missing passengers waited nearby.

READ MORE: Several dead, dozens injured as passenger train derails in Egypt

Experts investigate cause of collusion

Passengers with critical injuries were to be brought by helicopter to a nearby hospital.

Engineers and experts were trying to determine what caused the collision, said Azam Swati, the minister for railways who headed to the scene of the crash.
He told The Associated Press that all aspects would be examined, including the possibility of sabotage.

The segment of the railway tracks where the crash took place was old and needed replacing, Habibur Rehman Gilani, chairman of Pakistan Railways, told Pakistan’s Geo News TV. He did not elaborate.

Aijaz Ahmed, the driver of the Sir Syed Express, told the station that on seeing the derailed train, he tried his best to avoid the crash by braking but failed.
Railway officials said Ahmed was slightly injured, and villagers pulled him from the train's engine after the crash.

Imran Khan expresses deep sorrow

Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan expressed his deep sorrow over the tragedy, saying on Twitter that he asked the railway minister to supervise the rescue work and ordered a probe into the crash.

According to local media, some of the passengers on the Millat Express were heading to a wedding party.

Mohammad Amin, one of the passengers on the Millat Express who had minor injuries, told the AP from a hospital that before the train departed from the southern port city of Karachi, he and his brother saw mechanics working on one of the cars.

READ MORE: Fire on train in Pakistan kills at least 74 after gas canister explodes

That led them to believe there was something wrong with it, but they were reassured all was fine. Amin said he believed the car that was being worked on was the one that later derailed. Railway officials said they were recording statements of survivors, including the drivers.

Train accidents are common in Pakistan, where successive governments have paid little attention to improving the poorly maintained signal system and aging tracks.

In 1990, a packed passenger plowed into a standing freight train in southern Pakistan, killing 210 people in the worst rail disaster in the nation's history.

Route 6