The Hindu pilgrims had been returning from morning prayers on Monday at the end of a month of prayer ceremonies at the Katyaynani temple near Dhamara Ghat, a popular Hindu pilgrimage site.
The deaths sparked riots and a 5,000-strong crowd gathered around the scene of the accident in the Saharsa district in the state of Bihar. People pulled the driver from the stricken train and badly beat him before ransacking the nearby Dhamara Ghat station.

Mr Malik said: "Six carriages have been set on fire and the station has been ransacked by the mob. Our staff have fled the station fearing attacks."
Kumar Ashutosh, a passenger on the train, said that within a few seconds of hitting people on the track, the driver slammed on the emergency brakes and the train ground to a halt.
He said: "Soon, groups of people began running toward the engine. They asked us to get down from the train. Some of them pulled out the driver and his assistant and began beating them."

"I had woken up and was sitting near the window, when all this happened. There were crowds of people on the platform and some on the track. It all happened so fast," he said.
Railways spokesman Amitabh Prabhakar said that the pilgrims were killed "by an express train while they were crossing the tracks despite the red signal".
PN Raid, a Bihar Railway official said that 35 people had been killed in the accident.
However, the chairman of the national railway board, Arunendra Kumar, who is based in New Delhi, said that the Rajya Rani Express had been given permission to pass.

India has the largest railway network in the world but has a poor safety record.
Figures released by the railways minister in 2011 show that between January 2007 and September 2011 some 2,000 died in 738 accident.
Deaths at the country's 50,000 crossings were significantly greater with 2012 government figures showing 15,000 people were killed every year.
There have been continued promises from the government to improve the safety records of India's overcrowded and often unsafe trains.

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