Sukkur rail disaster

Sukkur rail disaster
Date 4 January 1990
Location Sukkur
Country Pakistan
Rail line Multan to Karachi
Operator Pakistan Railways
Type of incident collision
Cause Incorrectly set points
Statistics
Trains 2
Deaths 307
Injuries 700

The Sukkur rail disaster occurred on 4 January 1990 in the village of Sangi near Sukkur in the Sindh Province of Pakistan. 307 people were killed, making it Pakistan's worst rail disaster.[1]

The train concerned (Bahauddin Zakaria Express) was on a 500-mile overnight run from Multan to Karachi and was carrying many more passengers in its 16 carriages than its 1408-seat capacity. It was supposed to pass straight through the village of Sangi but incorrectly set rail points sent it into a siding where it collided with an empty 67-car freight train at a speed of at least 35 mph. The first three carriages were destroyed and the next two badly damaged; 307 people were killed and 700 injured.

The investigation found railway staff to be 'directly responsible' for the disaster. Three staff on duty at Sangi station were charged with manslaughter.[2]

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