Advertisement
X

Jalgaon Train Accident: Railway Board Sets Up Inquiry Team Of Five Senior Officials To Probe Case

༺The incident occurred on the evening of Wednesday, January 22, when 13 passengers of the Pushpak Express were killed by the Karnataka Express, which was heading from Bengaluru to Delhi.

PTI

⛄Railway Board has announced that a team of five senior officials has been tasked with investigating the tragic train incident in Jalgaon, Maharashtra, which resulted in the deaths of 13 people. 

ꦬThe victims, all passengers aboard the Mumbai-bound Pushpak Express, were run over by the oncoming Karnataka Express after pulling the train’s alarm chain and alighting onto the adjacent tracks.

♏The Railway Board confirmed o Thursday that the team would include the Principal Chief Safety Officer (PCSO), Principal Chief Security Commissioner (PCSC), Principal Chief Electrical Engineer (PCEE), Principal Chief Mechanical Engineer (PCME), and Principal Chief Commercial Manager (PCCM) from the Central Railway Zone. The team is being led by the PCSO, who has been appointed as the convener of the inquiry.

✨Dilip Kumar, Executive Director for Information and Publicity at the Railway Board, confirmed that the team had already begun its investigation into the circumstances surrounding the incident. “They have been asked to determine the cause of the incident and to submit their report as soon as possible,” Kumar stated.

🅷The incident occurred on the evening of Wednesday, January 22, when 13 passengers of the Pushpak Express were killed by the Karnataka Express, which was heading from Bengaluru to Delhi. According to reports, passengers of the Pushpak Express had exited the train after a chain-pulling incident triggered the alarm system. 

ꦐInitial speculation suggests that a rumour of a fire on the Pushpak Express may have caused panic among passengers, prompting them to exit the train. However, the Railway Ministry has since clarified that there was no fire, smoke, or any sparks from the train's coach.

ꦬSwapnil Dhanraj Nila, Chief Public Relations Officer for Central Railway, stated that the Railway Protection Force (RPF) and Government Railway Police (GRP) had initiated a preliminary investigation immediately after the incident. Nila also noted that the cause behind the panic, specifically the spread of the rumour, was still under investigation.

Advertisement

🐎The inquiry has now been handed over to the senior officials’ team, which will further explore the incident's causes, including who might have started the rumour and what led passengers to take such a dangerous course of action. When asked if the Commissioner of Railway Safety (CRS) would be involved in the investigation, Nila clarified that no order had yet been issued for a CRS enquiry.

Show comments
SG