18 dead in Egyptian train crash

The death toll from a train crash south of Cairo has reached 18, the Health Ministry said today, a day after the incident which…

The death toll from a train crash south of Cairo has reached 18, the Health Ministry said today, a day after the incident which involved two passenger trains.

The ministry, in a statement carried by the official Middle East News Agency (Mena), said 39 people were injured in the incident but 12 of them had already been discharged from hospital.

A first class train, filled with passengers, rammed into a nearly empty stationary train on the same track, security sources said.

Television images showed two crumpled carriages. It also showed the corpse of a cow under the wheels of one of the trains. Mena, citing witnesses, said the first train had stopped after it struck the cow.

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The moving train was headed south from Cairo toward Assiut and Aswan, a major tourist attraction and the site of pharaonic ruins, security sources said. No foreigners were reported among the casualties.

An Egyptian railway authority official said a technical committee had been set up to investigate the cause of the crash.

A series of road and rail accidents in Egypt in recent years has triggered an outcry over the government's handling of transport safety.

Yesterday's accident took place in al-Ayyat, which in 2002 was the scene of Egypt's worst rail disaster when fire ripped through seven carriages of an overcrowded passenger train, killing at least 360 people.

A train crash in northern Egypt killed 44 people in 2008, two years after a crash that killed 58 people.

Reuters