Fire kills 26 people on Bangalore-Nanded train after passengers were trapped inside because doors were locked overnight
- Sleeping passengers woke to the blaze that was caused by an electrical fault
- Two children are among the 26 people killed
- Train doors had been locked and windows encased in metal bars
- Survivors forced to smash toilet windows to escape
- Firefighters discovered charred bodies lying next to jammed doors
- Officials say some of the victims have been burned beyond recognition
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Officials say many of those trapped suffocated as the result of smoke inhalation after the blaze that took place in the early hours of the morning.
Two children are among the dead whose carriage was derailed from the rest of the train to prevent the fire from spreading.
At least 26 people died in the blaze that broke out at around 3.45am as the passengers were sleeping
Firefighters were forced to pry the locked doors open to retrieve the charred bodies of those who did not survive
Survivors were unable to help all other
passengers out of the train through the narrow toilet windows which were
the only way to escape
Two children are among those who have been killed in the fire that was reportedly caused by an electrical fault
Survivors were forced to smash windows and jump from the train which was halted one mile from the town of Puttaparthi in Andhra Pradesh state.
Seventy-six people were thought to have been in the carriage when the fire broke out. The blaze reportedly spread to another part of the train but was extinguished.
Firefighters forced their way into the carriage to find many of the bodies lying next to the jammed doors and smashed windows.
'We woke up to the screams of "fire, fire!". Everybody was screaming,' one survivor, identified as Patil, said.
Another, Sharad, recalled: 'We were all asleep. All of a sudden, we all woke up to a burning sensation.'
The man, who was able to save himself and three others by smashing through the windowpane of the cabin's toilet added: 'There was chaos. We realised the bogie (carriage) was burning.'
'But I could not save my wife and maternal uncle.'
India's Prime Minister expressed his 'shock and
sadness' at the incident in which at least 26 were killed and more
seriously burned
Firefighters and rescue teams had to force their way into the train as the doors had been locked
Initial rescue efforts were hindered by winter
fog according to reports, with the first people on scene being those
from nearby villages
The charred remains of plastic seats and
compartments are all that is left of the carriage where as many as 65
passengers had been sleeping
Some of the victims' bodies have been charred
beyond recognition according to officials who say DNA testing may be
necessary to identify those dead
Once inside the carriage firefighters discovered the bodies lying next to the carriage's doors and windows
Rescue officials said many bodies were charred beyond recognition and would have to undergo DNA tests to determine their identity.
'Rescue teams have so far recovered 26 bodies from the three-tier coach of the train while five of the eight injured have been admitted to hospital for emergency treatment,' South Western Railway spokesman S. Biswas said.
Prime Minister Manmohan Sigh expressed 'shock and grief at the loss of life in the train accident in Andhra Pradesh' in a statement on his official Twitter account.
The premier added he had told railway and state government authorities 'to extend all possible help to the victims in rescue and relief operations'.
The carriage was destroyed by the blaze, leaving a mass of twisted metal and melted plastic seats in its wake.
It is not clear how many people had been in the carriage when it caught fire, with some reports suggesting as many as 67 could have been on board.
The coach caught fire in the pre-dawn hours as it travelled from Bangalore to Nanded.
The exit doors of Indian trains are customarily locked at night, reports said, while the carriage windows are covered with bars.
The toilet windows are the only ones that have no bars, though they are considerably small.
The carriage had been separated from the rest of the train to prevent the fire from spreading according to witnesses
It is unclear exactly how many people were travelling in the carriage though reports suggest there were as many as 67
The train was travelling from Bangalore to Nanded when it caught fire near the small town of Puttaparthi in the early hours
Railway accidents are not uncommon on trains in India where public transport has been criticised as underfunded and unsafe
Officials were not sure of exactly how many
people were in the carriage when it caught fire,or whether they would
retrieve more bodies yet
'We were suffocating because we couldn't get the windows open, the windows are really strong,' one young man, who lost his cousin to the flames, told India's NDTV news.
The tragedy comes a little over a year after another train accident in the same state of Andhra Pradesh killed 32 people.
It was not immediately known whether more bodies would be found, police said.
The first people to reach the scene were from nearby villages as initial relief efforts were hindered by winter fog, reports indicate.
Railways Minister Kharge said the railway board chairman would lead an inquiry into the cause of the accident and a more complete report would be issued at a later date.
The engine driver stopped the train when he spotted flames about an hour away from Nanded, a police officer was quoted on The Hindu newspaper website as saying.
Accidents are common on India's railroad network, one of the world's largest, with some 18 million passengers daily. Most collisions and fires are blamed on poor maintenance and human error.
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