According to report, a human error caused the train accident that killed 288 in India

New Delhi.- An error in the labeling of the cables responsible for controlling the automatic signaling system of the tracks led to the worst train accident of the 21st century in India, which last month resulted in almost 290 deaths and a thousand injuries.

This negligence, committed in 2015 by personnel from the signaling and telecommunications department, was not corrected in subsequent years and led to confusion in the maintenance work that was being carried out on the road hours before the accident, according to the report on the accident. accident of the Railway Safety Commission (CRS), which is reported by the Indian Express newspaper.

As a result, the first of the passenger trains involved in the accident entered a track occupied by a parked freight train with which it collided and derailed. At that moment, another passenger railway passing through the station collided with both.

The accident took place on June 2 in the eastern state of Odisha, killing some 290 people and injuring more than 1,000, making it India’s worst rail accident of the 21st century.

The error in the wiring showed workers at the nearby Bahanaga Bazar station that the first passenger train would continue to run on a vacated track, instead of switching to the one occupied by the freight railway.

The report highlighted the chain of errors that led to this outcome, from the initial failure in 2015 to subsequent revision work that did not correct it, with special emphasis on 2018, when technicians changed the system without realizing the mistake.

In this sense, the report discovered that this same error occurred two weeks before the accident in another railway section in India, although in this case it did manage to be corrected on time.

The Indian railway network has undergone great modernization in recent years, with the inauguration of new stations, semi-high-speed trains and the development of new technology to try to reduce its high accident rate.

In 2021 alone, India recorded 17,993 rail accidents that killed 16,431 people and injured 1,852, according to the latest report from the National Crime Records Office.

With a route of 68,000 kilometers, the fourth in length in the world, behind the United States, Russia and China, it has some 21,650 trains and 7,349 stations throughout the country, and transports some 23 million passengers daily.

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