The death toll from India's rail
disaster rose to 142 on Monday after workers toiled through the night
removing victims from the wreckage, with grim warnings that more bodies
were trapped inside.
There was little hope of
finding survivors among the mangled remains of 14 carriages, which came
off the tracks in northern India on Sunday in a rural district of Uttar
Pradesh state.
"The actual toll will still be
higher and it would be a difficult task to identify all the persons,
particularly those whose bodies are very badly damaged," a senior local
government official told AFP.
"We do not have an
exact figure for the injured as of now. Rescue work is still going on,"
district police chief Zaki Ahmad told AFP as workers cleared the most
severely damaged carriages.
More than 2,000 people
are believed to have been on the train, though many were travelling
without reserved seats -- or without tickets at all -- making a precise
estimate impossible.
"It is difficult to say how
many people were exactly travelling but it was definitely over 2,000,"
said a spokesman for regional railway network.
A large crowd gathered
at the rescue site on Monday, with many combing through the bags and
clothes strewn across the area in the hope of finding clues to the fate
of their loved ones.
The disaster occurred at the peak of India's marriage season, and at least one wedding party was on board the train.
Local media said wedding clothes, jewellery and invitation cards could be seen spilling from abandoned bags.
Hundreds
of injured were being treated in nearby hospitals, including many young
children who had become separated from relatives.
Police were reportedly showing the children pictures of the dead in an effort to identify their parents.
A
fracture in the track is thought to have caused the Indore-Patna
Express to derail, sending the carriages cashing into each other and
leaving some twisted beyond recognition.
India's railway
network, one of the world's largest, is still the main form of
long-distance travel in the vast country, but it is poorly funded and
deadly accidents occur relatively frequently.
A
2012 government report said almost 15,000 people were killed every year
on India's railways, describing the loss of life as an annual
"massacre".
The latest accident -- one of India's
deadliest -- comes at a time when the government has signed numerous
deals with private companies to upgrade the country's ageing rail
network.
Last year, Japan agreed to provide $12
billion in soft loans to build India's first bullet train, though plans
remain in their infancy.
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