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19/07/2010 Train tragedy in West Bengal again - 61 dead, 157 injured    Sainthia (West Bengal), July 19 (IANS) A speeding express train   ploughed through a train standing at a station in West Bengal's Birbhum district   early Monday, killing at least 61 people and injuring more than 150. It was the   second train disaster in the Communist-ruled state in less than two months that   have taken a toll of over 200 lives.  The Sealdah-bound Uttar Banga Express slammed into three   coaches, one luggage van and two unreserved second class coaches, of the   stationary Bhagalpur-Ranchi Vananchal Express at Sainthia station in Birbhum,   about 190 km from Kolkata, at about 2.15 a.m., railway authorities said. 
 All three coaches were badly mangled by the severity of the collision   with one of the coaches shooting from the tracks and almost mounting the   footbridge above.
 
 Gas cutters were used to cut open the coaches and   bring out the dead and rescue the injured.
 
 "Many of the bodies got   pasted in the coaches. In some cases, we only managed to extricate body parts,   rather than whole bodies," said a rescue worker.
 
 While the army was   called in to help, locals were the first to rush to help as cries of the injured   passengers, many of whom had lost their limbs, cut through the dark night.
 
 Said a woman, who was travelling with her child and was jolted out of   sleep: "I saw there were many injured people in the coach ahead of ours. Many   had lost their upper or lower limbs. Some others had lost the upper parts of the   body."
 
 Among the dead were 58 passengers and three employees of the   India Railways that runs 10,000 passengers trains a day that ferries 1.8 million   passsengers, the largest under a single operator in the world. The toll was   expected to go up with 37 of the 157 injured in a critical condition.
 
 The three railway employees who died are driver M.C. Dey, assistant   driver N.K. Mandal of the Uttar Banga Express and the guard of the Vananchal   Express A. Mukherjee.
 
 As relatives of the passengers in the two trains   frantically looked for some information, Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee   expressed shock at the second accident in less than two months in her home   state.
 
 The official position of the railways was that the possible cause   could be that the driver of the Uttar Banga Express overshot the signal. Others   said the signal system could also have failed. Brake failure and inattentiveness   of officials at Sainthia could be a factor.
 
 The train, sources said, was   running at 110 km per hour and had made an unscheduled stop at Gadadharpur   station just nine kilometres away.
 
 Why, they asked, was the train going   at such high speeds minutes before the scheduled Sainthia stop.
 
 Banerjee   also had her doubts about how the accident occurred.
 
 She told reporters   at Sainthia: "I have some doubt in my mind regarding how the accident was   caused. We will talk about it after detailed investigation."
 
 The   accident occurred 52 days after the Gyaneshwari Express tragedy on May 28 in   which 148 people died as Maoist guerrillas cut open the pandrol clips ((used to   fix the rail to the sleeper) near Jhargram in West Midnapore district of the   state that is ruled by a Marxist-led left coalition for nearly three and a half   decades.
 
 Bodies from Sainthia were sent to the district hospital Suri,   the headquarters of Birbhum district, which with a 50-bed surgical ward was   ill-equipped to handle the numbers of injured, Government Railway Police (GRP)   sources said.
 
 While the railway ministry announced compensation of Rs.5   lakh to the kin of those killed and a job, the state government said it would   give Rs.3 lakh each.
 
 Banerjee also announced compensation of Rs.1 lakh   for the grievously injured and Rs.25,000 for those who sustained minor injuries   while the West Bengal government promised to bear all the expenses.
 
 The   tragedy, ahead of the elections next year, also set political temperatures   boiling with the ruling CPI-M asking Banerjee, chief of the opposition Trinamool   Congress, to accept responsibility.
 
 The Commissioner of Railway Safety   will conduct a probe.
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