India passenger train derails, killing 31 people, at least 50 injured

Several people were feared trapped in the train wreckage, and rescue efforts were focused on bringing them out alive, said a police official at the site of the accident.

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Rajesh Kumar Singh/AP
Rescuers work at the site of a train accident near Bachhrawan village in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, Friday, March 20, 2015. Police and rescue workers used gas cutters to rip apart the wreckage to find people who were feared to be trapped after three coaches of a passenger train derailed in northern India.

Three coaches of a passenger train derailed in northern India on Friday, killing 31 people, and rescuers were using gas cutters to rip apart the mangled wreckage to search for trapped people. At least 50 were injured.

Rescue workers pulled 31 bodies from the wreckage, said Ashwini Srivastava, a spokesman for the railways.

The engine and two coaches of the Janata Express jumped off the tracks near Bachhrawan village in Uttar Pradesh state.

Several people were feared trapped in the wreckage, and rescue efforts were focused on bringing them out alive, said Ram Murath Yadav, a police official at the site of the accident.

One of the derailed coaches was crushed by the impact and most of the casualties were in that coach, he said.

The cause of the derailment was not immediately known. The federal rail ministry has ordered an inquiry.

The driver of the train escaped unhurt and was being questioned, Srivastava said.

Train accidents are common in India. The country's railroad network is one of the world's largest and carries more than 23 million passengers each day.

Most accidents are blamed on poor maintenance and human error.

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