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ODISHA RAIL ACCIDENT

Trains lacked ‘Kavach’ safety system: Indian Railway

TBP Online
03 Jun 2023 21:08:29 | Update: 03 Jun 2023 21:09:40
Trains lacked ‘Kavach’ safety system: Indian Railway
India's Railways Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw arrives at the accident site of a three-train collision near Balasore, about 200 km (125 miles) from the state capital Bhubaneswar in the eastern state of Odisha, on June 3, 2023 — AFP Photo

A system developed by the Indian Railways to prevent train accidents due to driver error or other factors was not available on the tracks in Balasore where three trains collided last night, killing over 261. Some 900 were injured.

"The rescue operation has been completed. We are starting the restoration work. The Kavach system was not available on this route," Indian Railways spokesperson Amitabh Sharma said, reports NDTV.

Three trains had collided after one of the train's coaches derailed in Balasore at 7pm.

Kavach is an automatic train protection (ATP) system, developed by the Research Design and Standards Organisation jointly with three Indian firms.

Kavach not only helps locomotive drivers to avoid missing danger signals and control speeding but also ensures trains run safely in low-visibility conditions.

Railway Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw had personally tested the 'Kavach' system. "Rear-end collision testing is successful. Kavach automatically stopped the locomotive before 380 m of another locomotive at the front," Mr Vaishnaw tweeted in March last year.

Kavach controls train speed by automatically braking if the driver fails to apply the brakes on time.

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