15 January 2013 Last updated at 08:20 GMT
Cairo train derailment leaves 19 dead
A
military train carrying army recruits has derailed south of Egypt's capital,
Cairo, killing 19 people and injuring more than 100, officials say.
The train was heading to an
army camp in Cairo when a carriage became detached and crashed into a goods
train in the Badrashin area of Giza.
Egypt's prime minister visited
the scene, but was led to safety after being abused by angry bystanders.
Egypt's roads and railways have
a notoriously poor safety record.
Last November 50 children died
when a train hit their school bus near Manfalut, 350km (230 miles) south of
Cairo, after a signal operator fell asleep.
The transport minister and the
head of the railway authority were forced to resign in the wake of the crash.
Anger has been directed towards
the government for failing to improve railway safety and infrastructure.
People at the scene of the
latest crash shouted at Prime Minister Hisham Qandil "You have blood on
your hands", before he was led away by his security guards, AFP news
agency reported.
Monday's incident occurred as
the army train was heading from Upper Egypt into Cairo.
Reports say more than 1,300
passengers were aboard the train when it derailed shortly after midnight.
An eyewitness, Mohammad
Abul-Fadl, told BBC Arabic many victims were trapped.
"Ambulances didn't arrive
for half an hour. There were bodies everywhere," he said.
"An hour and a half later
and the railway authority [had not] sent any lifting equipment. Local people
tried to help. They've even brought in a loader from the local authority to
bring out some of the trapped victims, who were still alive, from under the
wreckage.
The latest incident could
increase the pressure on the government to tackle the safety of trains, the
BBC's Said Shehata reports from Cairo.
Four years ago, some 18 people
were killed and dozens injured in a collision between two passenger trains in
the Giza area.
And in 2002, a train caught
fire in Cairo, killing 373 people.
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