Seven wild Asiatic elephants were killed and a calf was injured when a high-speed passenger train collided with a herd crossing the tracks in India’s northeastern state of Assam early yesterday, local authorities said.
The train driver spotted the herd of about 100 elephants and used the emergency brakes, but the train still hit some of the animals, Indian Railways spokesman Kapinjal Kishore Sharma told reporters.
Five train coaches and the engine derailed following the impact, but there were no human casualties, Sharma said.
Photo: REUTERS
Veterinarians carried out autopsies on the dead elephants, which were to be buried later in the day.
The accident site is a forested area about 125km southeast of Assam’s capital city of Guwahati. Railway tracks in the state are frequented by elephants, but Indian Railways said in a statement the accident location was not a designated elephant corridor.
The Rajdhani Express train, traveling from Sairang in Mizoram state bordering Myanmar, was bound for the Indian national capital of New Delhi with 650 passengers onboard when it hit with elephants.
“We delinked the coaches which were not derailed, and the train resumed its journey for New Delhi. Around 200 passengers who were in the five derailed coaches have been moved to Guwahati in a different train,” Sharma said.
Speeding trains hitting wild elephants is not rare in Assam, which is home to an estimated 7,000 wild Asiatic elephants, one of the highest concentrations of the pachyderm in India. Since 2020, at least a dozen elephants have been killed by speeding trains across the state.
Wild elephants often stray into human habitations this time of year, when rice fields are ready for harvesting.
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