A cargo train travelling south of Egypt’s capital slammed into vehicles crossing the tracks early on Monday, killing at least 24 people, many from the same family returning from a wedding party, state TV and the head of emergency services said.
Ahmed el-Ansari, the Emergency Services chief, told The Associated Press the identities of the dead were not immediately clear. He said 28 people were injured, mostly with fractures, crush injuries and lost body parts, with some in critical condition. He said the scene had been cleared of victims.
The head of the Giza security sector, Kamal el-Dali, told the Nile News state TV station that most of the dead and injured were family members on a bus returning from a wedding in Cairo. Mr. el-Dali said the family had been heading to the southern city of Fayyoum.
Mr. el-Dali said the train, which carried construction materials, also hit a small truck coming from the opposite direction.
A security official said the train was travelling from the southern city of Beni Suef when it hit at least three vehicles near the village of Dahshur, about 40 kilometres south of Cairo. The head of Egypt’s railway, Hussein Zakaria, told Nile News that initial reports indicated the crossing gates of the tracks had been closed and the train’s driver was surprised to see vehicles still crossing.
“What could the guards have done? Stand in front of the bus?” Mr. Zakaria said. “The initial reports show no negligence ... We shall wait for the investigation.”
Almost exactly a year ago, a train crashed into a bus, killing 51 children travelling to school in the governorate of Assiut, some 320 kilometres south of Cairo. The Transport Minister and the Head of the Railways resigned following the accident.