Passenger train collides with freight train in India

At least 25 people died in a collision between two trains in India. Seventy survived. India has one of the largest railway networks in the world.

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AP
Rescuers evacuate a woman from a passenger train near Penukonda, about 105 miles north of Bangalore, India, Tuesday, May 22, 2012. The passenger train rammed into a parked freight train Tuesday.

A passenger train rammed into a parked freight train and caught fire before dawn Tuesday in southern India, killing at least 25 people and injuring dozens more.

Rescuers worked for about six hours to pull some 70 survivors from the twisted and smoldering wreckage near the southwestern border of Andhra Pradesh state.

At least 40 people were hospitalized with injuries, with about 10 in critical condition, local police chief Charu Sinha said.Railway accidents are relatively common in India, which has one of the world's largest networks and serves some 20 million passengers a day. Most collisions are blamed on poor maintenance and human error. The latest collision is likely to renew calls for more investment in rail safety.

IN PICTURES: Transportation around the world

The driver of the Hampi Express, upon seeing the cargo train stopped on the tracks ahead, slammed on the emergency brakes, which caused four cars of the Express to derail, officials said.

Firefighters and police put out the flames within three hours. Railway Minister Mukul Roy ordered an investigation, while officials said they were looking into whether the driver may have missed a signal or if the signal had malfunctioned.

"It seems that the driver of the Hampi Express overshot the signal," railway spokesman Anil Saxena said in Delhi. The driver and his assistant were among those hospitalized and had not yet been questioned by authorities.

Some of the victims were women and children, though most were construction workers traveling from the towns of Bellary and Hospet in the neighboring state of Karnataka to that state's capital of Bangalore, police official Harinath Reddy said. The route of the Hampi Express crosses back and forth between Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka.

The collision took place at a station near Penukonda, about 170 kilometers (105 miles) north of Bangalore.

Karnataka's chief minister, Sadananda Gowda, said relatives of the victims would be given 100,000 rupees ($1,800) in compensation.

Among the railway accidents in India this year:

In March, a train plowed into an overcrowded minivan on its tracks and killed 15 people in the minivan in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

A month earlier, a train derailed after hitting a bulldozer in the northeast state of Assam, killing three train passengers and injuring 16.

A collision in January between a passenger train and a freight train in northern Jharkhand state killed five people and injured nine.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

IN PICTURES: Transportation around the world

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