Witnesses described
watching in horror as one train sped into the city’s Quaidabad Railway Station
and rammed into the second, which was stationary, with the roar of the crash
swiftly followed by the screams of people trapped inside.
At least 17 people have
been killed and dozens more injured after two trains carrying hundreds of
passengers collided in Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi early Thursday,
officials said.
Officials said rescuers
armed with metal-cutting equipment and heavy cranes had managed to pull all the
passengers from the twisted wreckage. “No-one is left inside,” Ijaz Ahmad Khan,
a Karachi administrative official, told reporters at the scene.
Many were rushed to
Karachi’s Jinnah Hospital, where an AFP reporter described horrifying scenes as
the injured lay screaming and crying while medics rushed to help them. “I am
dying, I am dying, please, please, I am dying,” cried Abdul Ghaffar, 55, as
doctors tried to move his legs and hands. He appeared to have multiple
injuries, while his children and wife were also wounded and lay on beds nearby.
Other victims appeared too stunned to talk.
Many had head and foot
injuries, and at least one man had his leg amputated below the knee. Casualties
were still being counted but there could have been a total of up to 1,000
passengers on board the trains when the accident occurred, said Nasir Nazeer,
an administrative in Karachi. Seemi Jamali, a spokeswoman at Jinnah Hospital,
told AFP at least 17 people had died. Earlier she said the hospital had
received some 50 wounded.
‘We heard screams’ – The
accident occurred when the incoming “Zakria Express” from the central city of
Multan rammed into the “Fareed Express”, from Lahore, as it waited at Quaidabad
Station, also known as Jumma Goth, in the Landi neighbourhood of Karachi.
Factory worker Ajab Gul told AFP he was on his way to work when the accident
occurred. “Suddenly another train came speeding in and smashed into the parked
train,” he said, describing the sound of the crash as “huge”. “There were
clouds of dust and smog. After that we heard screams.
People inside the collided
trains were screaming and crying.” Onlookers rushed to their aid, he said,
adding that he had helped pull 17 people, including women and children, from
the wreckage. But, he added, “there were many other people trapped inside… we
could not get them out.” Train services from Karachi to the rest of the country
have been suspended. Rail accidents are common in Pakistan, which inherited
thousands of miles (kilometres) of track and trains from former colonial power
Britain.
The railways have seen
decades of decline due to corruption, mismanagement and lack of investment.
Thursday’s crash was the second this year involving the Fareed Express. In
February the northbound train hit a van at a crossing in southern Pakistan,
killing eight people from the same family.
Railway accidents in Pakistan often
take place at the unmanned crossings, which often lack barriers and sometimes
signals. In September four people were killed and more than 100 injured when
two trains collided near the central city of Multan.
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