Duronto Express Derailment: A Passenger’s Harrowing Account

“Our worst fears were confirmed,” recalls Justin Rao who was aboard the ill-fated Nagpur-Mumbai bound train.

Justin Rao
India
Published:
Derailed cabins of Nagpur-Mumbai bound Duronto Express.
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Derailed cabins of Nagpur-Mumbai bound Duronto Express.
(Photo: PTI)

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A huge shudder and a sharp jerk accompanied by a screeching sound woke me up from my early morning slumber in the air-conditioned coach.

The next thing I knew I was on the floor of the compartment. Luggage was strewn around and some of my co-passengers were shouting.

Dazed, we gingerly found our feet and looked out the window of our A2 two-tier coach. What we saw confirmed our worst fears – the Nagpur-Mumbai Duronto Express No 12290 had jumped off the tracks.

Passengers Awoken by Jolts

Most of the passengers on the prestigious fully air-conditioned superfast train must have been asleep when the train derailed between Vasind and Asangaon stations, a little after 6:30 am.

At that point, we were barely 65 kilometres and 90 minutes from our destination, the Chatrapati Shivaji Terminus in Mumbai.

The 18-coach train, with its distinctive green and yellow livery, had left Nagpur at 8:40 pm on Monday. The journey with only two stops in Bhusaval and Igatpuri had been uneventful.

Passengers had their dinner, joked, chatted and played cards as attendants brought white bedsheets and blankets for the night.

A spate of train derailments, one of which left 23 people dead on 19 August, was far from our minds as we made our beds and went to sleep for the overnight journey. Most of us woke up only when we felt the massive shaking that lasted about 5-10 seconds.

We were lucky that the derailment did not cause any fatalities or major injuries. Passengers managed to come out of the compartment and saw that six bogies had derailed. Those trapped in the washroom took some more time to come out. The impact on the first four coaches from the engine was severe.

It was raining heavily and there was water everywhere outside.
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Landslide the Cause, says Railway Official

The cause of the accident is not clear.

Central Railways’ spokesperson Sunil Udasi said a landslide triggered by heavy rains caused the derailment, and a disaster was averted by the alert driver who applied the emergency brakes in time.

Another official, however, said a portion of the tracks was washed away by the rains. The accident occurred near a water body, and some of us checked if any of the bogies had gone into the water but that was not the case. Passengers were getting drenched in heavy rain.

After a while, officials arrived, and asked the passengers to walk to the Vasind railway station, about a kilometre from the accident spot. A few hours later a rescue train reached the site to ferry the remaining passengers to Mumbai.

(The author is a PTI reporter who was on board the Nagpur-Mumbai Duronto Express when it derailed. Published in an arrangement with PTI.)

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