'Everything Turned Topsy-turvy': Survivors Describe Deadly Pakistan Train Crash

'Everything Turned Topsy-turvy': Survivors Describe Deadly Pakistan Train Crash


Norman Riaz was lying on his bunk bed aboard the Millat Express and playing with his mobile phone as it sped through the Pakistan countryside just before the deadly catastrophe early Monday.

The train was heading north from Karachi to Lala Musa with around 600 passengers aboard when it derailed at 3:30 am (2230 GMT) in the first part of a 25-hour, 1,300-kilometre (800-mile) journey.

When the train hit us, everything turned topsy-turvy, "When the train hit us, everything turned topsy-turvy," said survivor Norman Riaz. "My mother died in front of my eyes, everybody died" Photo: AFP / Asif HASSAN

It's not known what caused the train to jump its tracks, but Interior Minister Sheikh Rashid -- a former railways minister -- described that section of the line as "a shambles", while current minister Azam Swati called it "really dangerous".

Business-class passengers were stretched out on their bunks in their exclusive cabins, while those in economy were sitting shoulder-to-shoulder on padded bench seats.


"I couldn't sleep," Riaz said.

At least 43 people were killed and dozens injured when a packed Pakistani inter-city train ploughed into a train that had derailed minutes earlier in Daharki area of the northern Sindh province on June 7, 2021 At least 43 people were killed and dozens injured when a packed Pakistani inter-city train ploughed into a train that had derailed minutes earlier in Daharki area of the northern Sindh province on June 7, 2021 Photo: AFP / Asif HASSAN

Those in his cabin survived the derailment relatively unscathed, but just minutes later his world was turned upside down.

"We fell down but there were no injuries as such," he said.


"But when the train hit us, everything turned topsy-turvy. My mother died in front of my eyes, everybody died."

Army and railway engineers were working through the night to try and clear the tracks Army and railway engineers were working through the night to try and clear the tracks Photo: AFP / Asif HASSAN

Security personnel carry an injured passenger to an army helicopter at the site of the deadlly train accident Security personnel carry an injured passenger to an army helicopter at the site of the deadlly train accident Photo: AFP / Shahid Saeed MIRZA

The Sir Syed Express, in the last hours of a similar- length journey in the opposite direction from Rawalpindi, ploughed into the derailed train at speed, slicing through metal carriages like a tin opener.

At least 40 people were killed and over 100 injured -- most of them from the Millat.

"We tumbled upon each other, but that was not so fatal," Millat passenger Akhtar Rajput told AFP.

At least 40 people were killed and dozens injured when a packed Pakistani inter-city train ploughed into another express that had derailed just minutes earlier, officials said. At least 40 people were killed and dozens injured when a packed Pakistani inter-city train ploughed into another express that had derailed just minutes earlier, officials said. Photo: AFPTV / Muhammad Sohail

"Then another train hit us from nowhere, and that hit us harder. When I regained my senses, I saw passengers lying around me, some were trying to get out of the coach."

"I was disoriented and trying to figure out what happened to us when the other train hit," Shahid, another passenger, told AFP.

The locomotive driver of the Sir Sayed Express said he had seen only green lights as he trundled along the track.

"But when I crossed the signal and sped up then I saw few people signaling me (to stop)," Iftikhar Thaheem told local media.

"I pulled the emergency brake, but it was too late," he said, his head swathed in bandages and uniform covered in blood.

Local farmers and villagers were quick to the scene and by late Monday were still helping move wreckage, as army and civil engineers led a mass effort to clear and repair the tracks.

Railway officer Tariq Latif told AFP that they hoped to have one line open by midnight.

The railway first came through the cotton- and wheat-growing district in the 1880s, and little has changed in the 140 years since.

The accident happened on a section of track raised above fertile land that stretches to the horizon, with homes and small settlements dotted about.

As news spread, locals arrived on foot, bicycle and tractor to offer help, toiling under a blazing sun that pushed outdoor temperatures past 45 degrees Celsius (110 Fahrenheit).

Throughout the day the injured had been ferried by ambulances and private vehicles to nearby clinics and hospitals.

The dead were lined up next to the tracks, covered in sheets and blankets.