Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Sukkur rail disaster

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Location
  
Rail line
  
Cause
  
Incorrectly set points

Date
  
4 January 1990

Injuries
  
700

Country
  
Type of incident
  
collision

Trains
  
2

Total number of deaths
  
307

Operator
  

The Sukkur rail disaster occurred on 4 January 1990 in the village of Sangi near Sukkur in the Sindh Province of Pakistan. 307 people were killed, making it Pakistan's worst rail disaster.

The train concerned (Bahauddin Zakaria Express) was on a 500-mile overnight run from Multan to Karachi and was carrying many more passengers in its 16 carriages than its 1408-seat capacity. It was supposed to pass straight through the village of Sangi but incorrectly set rail points sent it into a siding where it collided with an empty 67-car freight train at a speed of at least 35 mph. The first three carriages were destroyed and the next two badly damaged; 307 people were killed and 700 injured.

The investigation found railway staff to be 'directly responsible' for the disaster. Three staff on duty at Sangi station were charged with manslaughter.

References

Sukkur rail disaster Wikipedia


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