Dozens killed as trains collide in southern Egypt flipping over passenger carriages
Local media displayed videos from the scene showing flipped wagons with passengers trapped inside and surrounded by rubble.
Two trains collided on Friday in southern Egypt, causing three passenger cars to flip over, killing 32 people and leaving 66 injured, health authorities said.
Dozens of ambulances rushed to the scene in the southern province of Sohag, according to a statement by Egypt’s heath ministry.
Local media displayed videos from the scene showing flipped wagons with passengers trapped inside and surrounded by rubble. Some victims seemed unconscious, while others could be seen bleeding. Bystanders carried bodies and laid them out on the ground near the site.
President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi said he was monitoring the situation and that those responsible would be held accountable.
“The pain that tears our hearts today cannot but make us more determined to end this type of disasters,” he wrote on his Facebook page.
Egypt’s railway system has a history of badly maintained equipment and poor management.
Official figures show that 1,793 train accidents took place in 2017 across the country.In 2018, a passenger train derailed near the southern city of Aswan, injuring at least six people and prompting authorities to fire the chief of the country’s railways.
In the same year, el-Sissi said the government lacks about 250 billion Egyptian pounds, or $14.1 billion, to overhaul the run-down rail system.
El-Sissi spoke a day after a passenger train collided with a cargo train, killing at least 12 people, including a child. A year earlier, two passenger trains collided just outside the Mediterranean port city of Alexandria, killing 43 people. In 2016, at least 51 people were killed when two commuter trains collided near Cairo.
Egypt’s deadliest train crash took place in 2002, when over 300 people were killed when fire erupted in speeding train traveling from Cairo to southern Egypt.