Egypt buries train crash dead, toll revised to 19

A man walks at the site where two trains have collided near the city of Sohag
A man walks at the site where two trains have collided near the city of Sohag, Egypt, on Mar 26, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Meritt Elsayed Ali)

TAHTA: Egypt buried the dead on Saturday (Mar 27) from a train collision that killed at least 19 people and injured 185, according to a revised toll, as investigators probed the country's latest deadly rail crash.

Health Minister Hala Zayed told reporters that an initial toll of 32 killed in Friday's crash was revised down, while the number of injured rose from 165.

"After we honed in on the details of those killed and injured... at this moment there are 185 injured and 19 corpses and three bags of body parts," Zayed said, without giving further details.

Surveillance camera footage of the accident seen by AFP showed a speeding train barrelling into another as it rolled slowly down the tracks, sending a carriage hurtling into the air in a cloud of dust.

Most of those injured in Friday's crash that occurred in the Tahta district of southern Sohag province suffered fractures.

READ: 32 dead, 66 injured after passenger trains collide in Egypt

The first victims were laid to rest early on Saturday with small groups of family and friends in attendance as residents, who appeared mistrustful of outsiders, kept the media at bay.

Other burials were expected to take place following mid-day Muslim prayers, an AFP reporter said.

President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi pledged tough punishment for those responsible for the crash, the latest in a series of rail accidents to plague Egypt. Such incidents are generally attributed to poor infrastructure and maintenance.

"CARNAGE"

It came as the most populous Arab nation struggles with another major transport challenge - a giant container ship blocking the Suez Canal, a vital shipping lane for international trade.

Early on Saturday, Egypt was again struck by tragedy when a building collapsed in the capital Cairo, killing at least five people and injuring 24 others, according to officials.

READ: Building collapses in Egypt's capital killing 5, injuring 24

At the scene of the rail disaster, technicians worked through Friday evening to remove five dislocated and damaged carriages. By morning the crash area was cleared of twisted metal and debris.

Rail traffic also resumed ahead of the burials.

Witnesses and survivors recounted horrifying scenes.

"We were at the mosque then a child came and told us (about the incident). We heard the collision, so we rushed and found the carnage," said a 59-year-old man speaking on condition of anonymity.

The first ambulances to reach the scene arrived "around half an hour" after the crash, he said.

"There were children who removed (debris) using wooden ladders," added the witness, who spent the day helping rescue workers.

One train was travelling between the southern city of Luxor and Alexandria on the Mediterranean coast, and the other between the southern city of Aswan and Cairo.

Kamel Nagi, a 20-year-old conscript, was on the Cairo-bound train after enjoying a few days of leave.

"Our train suddenly stopped and a quarter of an hour later, the second arrived and struck us," said Nagi, who suffered multiple broken bones.

"I saw it coming, screamed, then found myself on the ground in great pain," he said from his hospital bed as a nurse gave him an injection to alleviate his pain.

"ACCIDENTS CAN HAPPEN"

Authorities opened an investigation to determine the circumstances of the accident, while the rail authority blamed the crash on unidentified passengers who "activated emergency brakes" in one train.

The prosecution said it would interrogate several rail employees, including the two train drivers, their assistants and the signalman.

They will also have to undergo drug testing and their mobile phones have been seized by the authorities to examine their call logs, it added.

Source: AFP/ga