Sunday, October 25, 2009

Egypt train crash kills 18

CAIRO — A train collision that killed 18 people in Egypt came after a signalman left work early and failed to warn drivers of delays because of a water buffalo on the track, an initial inquiry found on Sunday.

The signalman and 17 others were killed and 36 injured on Saturday as a passenger train ploughed at full-speed into the back of another train southwest of Cairo, said the general prosecutor's office in charge of the official probe.

The first train, heading to Fayyum, 100 kilometres (65 miles) from the capital, made an unscheduled stop after the driver spotted a water buffalo on the track, it said in a statement.

But signalman Sayyed Ali Tehewi left his cabin early to catch a train home, causing a second train to crash into the first.

In a tragic twist, Tehewi had left to catch that second train, on a southbound route from Cairo to Assyut, 400 km (250 miles) from Cairo, and died in the crash, the prosecutor's office said.

The trains collided near Guerzah, close to the town of Al-Ayyat, around 40 kilometres (25 miles) from Cairo.

The prosecutor's office said both drivers, one of whom was injured and recovering in hospital, were being questioned by authorities.

Egyptian Nile News television showed footage of rescuers removing heaps of tangled metal from the scene of the accident.

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