People look at a damaged train inside Ramsis train station in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2019. The high-speed crash caused an explosion of the locomotive's fuel tank and triggered a huge blaze that engulfed that part of the station.
CAIRO, EGYPT —
Egyptian media say more than 25 people were killed and dozens wounded Wednesday after a passenger train crashed into the platform at Cairo's main rail station. The impact caused a fuel tank on the platform to explode, setting fire to the train.
At Least 25 Killed in Locomotive Crash, Fire at Egypt's Central Cairo Station
1/11Policemen guard the accident site as investigators arrive to inspect the scene for clues on why the locomotive, which crashed at high speed, failed to stop. (H. Elrasam/VOA)
At least 25 people were killed and dozens injured after a locomotive crashed into a platform at high speed at Cairo's main railway station on Wednesday, causing its fuel tank to explode.
2/11Passengers take photos of the locomotive wreck. (H. Elrasam/VOA)
At least 25 people were killed and dozens injured after a locomotive crashed into a platform at high speed at Cairo's main railway station on Wednesday, causing its fuel tank to explode.
3/11Officials stand next to the burned wreckage of a locomotive after the crash at Cairo’s main railway station. The crash set off a massive explosion when the locomotive’s fuel tank exploded. (H. Elrasam/VOA)
At least 25 people were killed and dozens injured after a locomotive crashed into a platform at high speed at Cairo's main railway station on Wednesday, causing its fuel tank to explode.
4/11Passengers’ burned clothing and other belongings litter the platform after the crash, Feb. 27, 2019. (H. Elrasam/VOA)
At least 25 people were killed and dozens injured after a locomotive crashed into a platform at high speed at Cairo's main railway station on Wednesday, causing its fuel tank to explode.
5/11The crash photos went viral on social media. Scenes of death and destruction at the railway station did not stop many from boarding trains in the capital in the hours after the crash, Feb. 27, 2019. (H. Elrasam/VOA)
At least 25 people were killed and dozens injured after a locomotive crashed into a platform at high speed at Cairo's main railway station on Wednesday, causing its fuel tank to explode.
6/11Cairo’s main train station is one of the busiest in North Africa and the Middle East. The Egyptian rail system carries millions of people every day and comes under frequent criticism for its safety record. Official reports say there were nearly 1,800 accidents in 2017 alone. (H. Elrasam/VOA)
At least 25 people were killed and dozens injured after a locomotive crashed into a platform at high speed at Cairo's main railway station on Wednesday, causing its fuel tank to explode.
7/11“It is heart breaking,” said Mohamed Abdullattif, a railway sleeping car attendant whose train pulled into the station shortly after the crash. “If I could, I would not ride the train ever (again), but it is my job.” (H. Elrasam/VOA)
At least 25 people were killed and dozens injured after a locomotive crashed into a platform at high speed at Cairo's main railway station on Wednesday, causing its fuel tank to explode.
8/11Police clear the crash scene as officials arrive to investigate the cause, Feb. 27, 2019. (H. Elrasam/VOA)
At least 25 people were killed and dozens injured after a locomotive crashed into a platform at high speed at Cairo's main railway station on Wednesday, causing its fuel tank to explode.
9/11Cairo residents rushed to donate blood near the crash scene, Feb. 27, 2019. (H. Elrasam/VOA)
At least 25 people were killed and dozens injured after a locomotive crashed into a platform at high speed at Cairo's main railway station on Wednesday, causing its fuel tank to explode.
10/11Passengers gather at the accident scene after the crash, Feb. 27, 2019. (H. Elrasam/VOA)
At least 25 people were killed and dozens injured after a locomotive crashed into a platform at high speed at Cairo's main railway station on Wednesday, causing its fuel tank to explode.
11/11As crews work to clear the soaked, charred wreckage, paramedics stand by for instructions after tending to victims. At least 25 died and dozens injured in the crash, Feb. 27, 2019. (H. Elrasam/VOA)
At least 25 people were killed and dozens injured after a locomotive crashed into a platform at high speed at Cairo's main railway station on Wednesday, causing its fuel tank to explode.
Previous slide
Next slide
The accident at the Ramsis railway station set off a massive fireball, incinerating the front cars of the train and causing horrific burns to passengers and bystanders on the platform adjacent to the crash. Surveillance cameras captured the incident, showing bystanders on fire and running to escape the inferno.
One security camera showed a man, his body on fire, running down a set of stairs before collapsing. Rescue workers reported that many of the casualties were in critical condition, suffering severe burns.
Fire and rescue vehicles rushed to the scene during the morning rush hour. Fire crews doused the burning passenger cars, and many people inside the front cars were thought to have been incinerated by the fire and extreme heat of the blaze.
Prime Minister Mustapha Madbouli told reporters on the platform, after visiting the crash site, that every effort was being made to determine what happened.
He says the era of keeping silent and sweeping things under the rug has come to an end and the government will do its utmost to determine what happened and who was responsible, with a committee investigating the crash.
Witnesses say the train did not slow down as it approached the station. Egyptian railways are beset with frequent accidents due to brake failure and other incidents related to the antiquated state of signals, tracks, locomotives and passenger cars. The latest disaster led to the resignation of Egypt's transportation minister, Hisham Arafat.
Ashraf al Ashri, editor of Cairo's Al Ahram newspaper, told Al Arabiya TV that he believed that "both technical and human error were to blame" and that he suspected that the "brakes of the train may have failed, due to the speed at which the train approached the platform," before crashing.