Egyptian town rallies after train crash as El Sisi vows reforms


Kamal Tabikha
  • English
  • Arabic

Prosecutors on Saturday questioned the drivers of two trains that collided in southern Egypt a day earlier, killing at least 19 people, as survivors recounted the horror of the crash.

The questioning came as President Abdel Fatah El Sisi chaired an emergency meeting with senior government ministers to prevent a repeat of the latest deadly accident in the country’s antiquated railway system.

Surveillance camera footage of the accident, in the southern province of Sohag, showed a speeding train barreling into another as it rolled down the tracks, sending a carriage hurtling into the air in a cloud of dust.

"I heard a thunderous sound and I was thrown into the air. When I hit the ground, I couldn't get up, I just looked around me in a daze," Salah Mohammed, a 22-year-old army conscript who was asleep on one of the trains, told The National.

He sustained sprains to his sternum and injured one leg when he landed a few metres away from where he was laying.

“I was lying on the ground when women came and stood over me and wailed thinking I was dead. I was too disoriented to reassure them that I was alive,” he said.

He was expected to be discharged from hospital in two days and walk unaided in two weeks.

Survivor Adel Fawzy, 21, was lucky to be seated in a car away from the rear cars that were overturned by the collision. He suffered minor injuries to his head and knee.

"When I saw what happened to the carriages closest to the crash, I thanked God over and over again," he told The National.

Health Minister Hala Zayed, meanwhile, said on Saturday that an initial toll of 32 killed released by the ministry was revised down, while the number of injured rose from 165.

"After we homed in on the details of those killed and injured... at this moment there are 185 injured, 19 corpses and three bags of body parts," Mr Zayed said, without giving further details.

She did not explain how the death toll discrepancy arose.

The people of El Maragha, the town near the crash site, rushed to help after the collision.

“One of the great things about yesterday was the speed with which people came together to support the victims’ families,” said Mohamed Reda, a local resident.

Announcements rolled out all day on Friday and Saturday from loudspeakers scattered around the town, calling on residents to head to hospitals to donate blood for the injured.

"Once the announcement was heard through the speakers, the streets of Al Maragha were flooded with people heading to help out," he told The National, from the town on the banks of the Nile.

“They visited hospitals and if there was a shortage, they went and bought it from medical centres and brought it to the hospitals,” said Mr Reda.

Many people donated food, water and blankets to local hospitals.

Images shared online on Friday from the town and nearby areas showed dozens of men lining up to donate blood at hospitals.

Residents also posted their phone numbers and addresses on social media support groups that quickly sprang up, offering accommodation to relatives who had come to claim the bodies of loved ones, and travellers left stranded

The first funerals took place on Saturday, with small groups of family and friends in attendance in villages surrounding Tahta, near the crash site.

In Cairo, a statement by the country’s chief prosecutor said the train drivers, their assistants and signal staff were being questioned.

They would also undergo drug tests and their mobile phones would be examined, added the statement.

Mr El Sisi, whose government is in the middle of a multibillion-dollar programme to upgrade the railway system, has demanded that anyone found to be responsible for the crash – whether through negligence or corruption – be brought to justice.

"The pain in our hearts today will only increase our determination to put an end to this type of disaster," Mr El Sisi wrote on social media on Friday.

On Saturday, according to a statement, the president gave orders that measures be taken to strike a balance between upgrading the railway system and safely running the service in the meantime.

“The completion of the [overhaul plan] of the system is the only way to avoid this type of disaster,” the statement quoted Mr El Sisi as saying in his meeting with Prime Minister Mustafa Madbouli and seven ministers.

The Health Ministry and the state-owned Railway Authority have said the crash happened when the first train's emergency brakes were triggered by unknown individuals, causing it to come to an abrupt stop.

Another train approaching from behind then collided with it, overturning two carriages.

The engine car of the second train was derailed.

Online video and images from the site, a rural area by the side of a canal, showed a chaotic scene, with dozens of civilians and rescue workers sifting through the wreckage looking for survivors.

Bodies of victims were covered with sheets and laid next to the wreckage. On Saturday, security forces cordoned off the site of the crash.

Emergency service personnel and engineers worked through the night on Friday to clear wrecked train carriages.

Giant cranes removed the wreckage and tons of debris from the rail, allowing normal traffic to return to normal 24 hours after the crash.

Train accidents are not uncommon in Egypt, where the rail network is stretched and the signal system is antiquated.

Transport Minister Kamel El Wazir said on Saturday that 225 billion pounds have been set aside to upgrade the railway service, of which nearly 50 billion would go to overhauling the signals system alone.

“I offer an apology from me and every railway employee for this painful accident,” said the minister, a former general who previously led the army’s Engineering Corps.

“We have a long way to go,” Prime Minister Mustafa Madbouli told reporters on Friday, referring to efforts to overhaul the railway system. “It is not a question of funding but rather the time it will take to upgrade the system.

"Regrettably, while we are doing this, accidents do happen, so we have no choice but to speed up the process of overhauling the system."

Mr Madbouli said the government will pay 100,000 Egyptian pounds to each family who lost a loved one and between 20,000-40,000 to those injured.

Friday's crash was the deadliest rail accident since February 2019, when an engine car laden with fuel hit a wall at Cairo's main train station, starting a fire that killed 22 people and injured scores.

In 2017, two passenger trains collided in northern Egypt, killing at least 41 people and injuring more than 120.

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Family: I have three siblings, one older brother (age 25) and two younger sisters, 20 and 13 

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What do you love eating or cooking: I’m constantly in the kitchen. Ever since I changed the way I eat I enjoy choosing and creating what goes into my body. However, nothing can top home cooked food from my parents. 

Favorite place to go in the UAE: A quiet beach.

What is Diwali?

The Hindu festival is at once a celebration of the autumn harvest and the triumph of good over evil, as outlined in the Ramayana.

According to the Sanskrit epic, penned by the sage Valmiki, Diwali marks the time that the exiled king Rama – a mortal with superhuman powers – returned home to the city of Ayodhya with his wife Sita and brother Lakshman, after vanquishing the 10-headed demon Ravana and conquering his kingdom of Lanka. The people of Ayodhya are believed to have lit thousands of earthen lamps to illuminate the city and to guide the royal family home.

In its current iteration, Diwali is celebrated with a puja to welcome the goodness of prosperity Lakshmi (an incarnation of Sita) into the home, which is decorated with diyas (oil lamps) or fairy lights and rangoli designs with coloured powder. Fireworks light up the sky in some parts of the word, and sweetmeats are made (or bought) by most households. It is customary to get new clothes stitched, and visit friends and family to exchange gifts and greetings.  

 

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Salah in numbers

€39 million: Liverpool agreed a fee, including add-ons, in the region of 39m (nearly Dh176m) to sign Salah from Roma last year. The exchange rate at the time meant that cost the Reds £34.3m - a bargain given his performances since.

13: The 25-year-old player was not a complete stranger to the Premier League when he arrived at Liverpool this summer. However, during his previous stint at Chelsea, he made just 13 Premier League appearances, seven of which were off the bench, and scored only twice.

57: It was in the 57th minute of his Liverpool bow when Salah opened his account for the Reds in the 3-3 draw with Watford back in August. The Egyptian prodded the ball over the line from close range after latching onto Roberto Firmino's attempted lob.

7: Salah's best scoring streak of the season occurred between an FA Cup tie against West Brom on January 27 and a Premier League win over Newcastle on March 3. He scored for seven games running in all competitions and struck twice against Tottenham.

3: This season Salah became the first player in Premier League history to win the player of the month award three times during a term. He was voted as the division's best player in November, February and March.

40: Salah joined Roger Hunt and Ian Rush as the only players in Liverpool's history to have scored 40 times in a single season when he headed home against Bournemouth at Anfield earlier this month.

30: The goal against Bournemouth ensured the Egyptian achieved another milestone in becoming the first African player to score 30 times across one Premier League campaign.

8: As well as his fine form in England, Salah has also scored eight times in the tournament phase of this season's Champions League. Only Real Madrid's Cristiano Ronaldo, with 15 to his credit, has found the net more often in the group stages and knockout rounds of Europe's premier club competition.

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Saturday, October 26: ‘The Time That Remains’ (2009) by Elia Suleiman
Saturday, November 2: ‘Beginners’ (2010) by Mike Mills
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Saturday, December 7: ‘Timbuktu’ (2014) by Abderrahmane Sissako
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Our legal advisor

Ahmad El Sayed is Senior Associate at Charles Russell Speechlys, a law firm headquartered in London with offices in the UK, Europe, the Middle East and Hong Kong.

Experience: Commercial litigator who has assisted clients with overseas judgments before UAE courts. His specialties are cases related to banking, real estate, shareholder disputes, company liquidations and criminal matters as well as employment related litigation. 

Education: Sagesse University, Beirut, Lebanon, in 2005.