The train disaster |
On Monday night, 14 January 2013, the military train crashed near Giza,
in the city of Badrashin. The deadly train disaster took the lives of 19
Central Security Forces conscripts and left more than 120 people injured, according
to the information of Egyptian Ministry of Health.
The train which reportedly belonged to Egypt’s military was en route to
Cairo from Upper Egypt and has been carrying the conscripts to the place of
their first trainings.
The train had some technical problems and has stopped several times
during the night. The train then derailed and crashed with another train
transporting the goods near Giza.
The injured have been transported to the nearest hospital and later to
Cairo’s Maadi Hospital, where Egypt’s President Mohamed Morsy visited the
victims of the train disaster and held brief press conference. The President
promised the families of the victims won’t be left without help and the tragedy
should be investigated.
Egypt’s President has also held an urgent meeting with Prime Minister
Hisham Qandeel and Cabinet of Ministers regarding the train crash.
I’d like to share here also Ahram Online report about the tragedy in
Badrashin. The article includes the reports of eyewitnesses and some details
for the train disaster.
The article was originally published here.
Witnesses, survivors recount Egypt's deadly Badrashin train crash
Ahram Online visits site of Monday's deadly rail disaster in Giza and
speaks to eyewitnesses; survivors and hospital workers in hopes of finding out
what really happened
Lina El-Wardani , Tuesday 15 Jan 2013
Hours after the tragic train crash that killed at least 19 passengers
and injured scores of others in the Giza suburb of Badrashin, victims'
relatives and police officials remained gathered at the scene and a military
helicopter hovered overhead.
The 12-carriage train, which was carrying 1,328 Central Security Forces
(CSF) conscripts, mostly around 20 years old, had been travelling en route to
Cairo from Upper Egypt. The conscripts had been preparing for their first military
training, when two railway cars – each carrying over 200 soldiers – derailed,
hitting a cargo train sitting outside a storage depot.
Both CSF conscripts and eyewitnesses say the train was a military one,
and therefore hold Egypt's defence ministry responsible. The defence ministry
has since issued a statement, however, clarifying that the doomed train
belonged to Egypt's State Security apparatus.
When asked, police at the scene – including Lieutenant-Colonel Mohammed
Abdel-Hamid, vice-president of the Badrashin Police Station – said the train
was the responsibility of the transportation ministry.
At the crash scene, two train carriages could be seen: one upside down,
the other – several metres away – lies crushed in a field. Among the rubble,
one can see passengers' clothing; the stench of death is in the air.
Across the street from where the accident took place, Ramadan Mohamed
sips tea with his family, as Reda Abdel-Latif, his mother, washes the clothes
of her three grandchildren. All of them heard the train crash – to which they
had been first responders – late Monday night.
"I got up when I heard conscripts screaming 'Help!' I stopped a car
that was passing by and we called the ambulance and police, which arrived ten
minutes later," Abdel-Latif recalled. "Then we stopped trains coming
from both directions and began moving the injured to nearby hospitals."
She went on to recount how, together with neighbours, they collected
money and bought medical equipment for the nearby Hawamdiya Hospital, which,
they say, had been totally unequipped. "The young people wanted to donate
blood, but found no syringes or bags in the hospital," Abdel-Latif said.
Nasser El-Saqa, another eyewitness at the scene, told Ahram Online:
"We were sitting here at a cafe when we heard a very loud noise. We rushed
to the scene to see dozens of dead and injured on the ground. Body parts and
blood were everywhere. Ambulances arrived 15 minutes later and police came an
hour or two after this," said El-Saqa.
Conflicting reports
At the Hawamdiya Hospital, to which many of the injured were moved,
conflicting reports persist.
Morgue official Mohammed El-Sayed told Ahram Online that the hospital
had not been equipped for the disaster at all.
"There was no cotton, no alcohol or bandages; there was a lack of
the most basic supplies. I saw injured people who might have been saved if we
had had the right equipment," El-Sayed asserted.
Hospital officials, however, tell a different story.
"The hospital is totally equipped; we have everything," said
hospital deputy head Abdel Ati Hamed. He went on to note that Hawamdiya
Hospital had treated 39 of the wounded, seven of whom eventually succumbed to
their injuries.
In each room of the hospital, three or four injured conscripts could be
seen, some sitting down, two or three to one bed. The hospital reeked of fried
food, while cats could be seen in patients' rooms and children played on the
stairs.
Eyewitness accounts
Ahram Online spoke to two injured CSF conscripts, who gave firsthand
accounts of what happened that fateful night.
Mohamed Ali, 20, who sustained back and head injuries:
"The train set out at about 6pm. There was a strange sound in the
wheels, especially in the last carriage, which I was in. The train itself moved
very slowly and stopped frequently. We told the train driver, and he reported
the problem."
"The train stopped completely in Minya, but no one inspected it
there. Then it moved again at greater speed and the strange noise grew louder.
Just after Beni Suef and before Giza, we heard very loud banging that lasted
five minutes. Then the last two carriages crashed into a stationary cargo
train."
"We were thrown right and left, and then the carriage flipped over.
I passed out and awoke to find myself in a truck with four other injured
passengers en route to a hospital. I don't remember how I got out of the
train."
"On the truck I was in, one injured passenger had a broken leg; his
leg hung by the skin only. Another had his nose broken, while a third had
suffered broken ribs. I'm one of the lucky ones who had been sitting with five
others in seats fit for two. Others were crammed into the upper shelves usually
reserved for baggage. Those are the ones who died."
Ibrahim Mohamed, 21, who sustained head and foot injuries:
"We were worried about the weird noises the train was making. We
tried to convince our superiors to let us out in Minya or change trains, but
they refused. When the train stopped in Minya, we hoped that they had done
something to fix the problem, but they didn't."
"The carriage kept dancing left and right, and we moved with it
until it crashed into another train, after which we found ourselves on the
ground and the train on top of us. I was okay, but around me people were
bleeding, while others couldn't move. I kept yelling for help."
"Then people began to come to the rescue and we moved the injured
in cars and trucks until police and ambulances began arriving. It was very
dark; we couldn't see anything. The train kept moving, meanwhile, as the driver
didn't realise that the last two carriages were gone until some four kilometres
later."
"We kept looking for our colleagues, but it was so dark. We used
our mobile phones to see and we saw people missing legs and hands. We tried as
best we could to move them to the hospital."
"I had been happy to join the army. I expected that we would take comfortable
buses – not be crammed five in one seat in an ancient train in which passengers
ride in spaces reserved for baggage and conscripts insult us. This is shameful;
this is a military train and the minister of defence is responsible."
"We don't want resignations, we want military trials for the
officials responsible for this crime of negligence."
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