Dear Friends:

Did you know 40 people die everyday on Railway crossings in India Or you might 
have a rat as your companion during breakfast and lunch
inside dining area of the train? Know why the erstwhile Minister of the Indian 
Railways had to quit from today's N Y Times (23 03 2012).
A Must Read..


-bhuban








March 23, 2012, 2:01 AM
India’s Decrepit, Unsafe Railways
By MONISHA RAJESH

Babu/Reuters
A worker uses a hose to clean the tracks at a railway station in Chennai, Tamil 
Nadu, March 14, 2012.

Dinesh Trivedi: ‘If you do not increase the fares, you are going to turn the 
railway coaches into coffins.’
The recent resignation of railway minister Dinesh Trivedi caused an uproar in 
India, and raised serious questions about the stability of India’s governing 
United Progressive Alliance. It has also shined a spotlight on the decrepit, 
outdated and unsafe conditions in some of India’s massive, 65,000-kilometer, or 
40,000-mile, rail system, which carries seven billion passengers a year.
Mr. Trivedi, who was asked to leave after proposing a raise ranging from 2 
paise per kilometer traveled to 30 paise per kilometer, said in an interview 
Wednesday that he would propose the fare hike again, because conditions are 
that dire. The railway system, some of which is 150 years old, is courting 
disaster by not investing money to repair tracks and adding safety features 
that are standard in other countries.
“If I had to give the budget again, I would give the same budget,” he insisted. 
“The passengers were telling me to increase the fares, the unions were telling 
me, the general public was telling me, everyone was telling me that if you do 
not increase the fares, you are going to turn the railway coaches into coffins.”
As an experienced rail passenger, I share Mr. Trivedi’s concerns. Starting in 
January of 2010 I spent four months traveling the length and breadth of Indian 
Railways, riding over 100 trains as research for a book.
Indian Railways is considered the bloodstream that keeps the nation alive, a 
heavy burden when its passenger services operate at an annual loss of 200 
billion rupees, or about $3.9 billion. In addition to an aging system and 
fiscal problems, there are a number of other problems: traffic between large 
cities often runs at more than 120 percent of planned capacity, causing trains 
to travel more slowly and tracks to wear out faster than intended. Lightweight 
tracks and underpowered locomotives mean that trains can haul no more than 
5,000 tons of cargo, compared with 20,000-ton capacities in the United States, 
China and Russia. And the waste which falls directly from the train toilets is 
corroding tracks.
Indian trains have an unrivaled charm and even beauty, but the main reason I 
chose them was that they were incredibly cheap. A 90-day air conditioned car 
two-tier rail pass cost $540 – including meals. For many people they are the 
only way to travel long distances – airline tickets are too expensive, and 
India’s roads are too poor.
As I traveled, a general disregard for safety was a constant. I passed unmanned 
railway crossings, where cyclists attempted to wheel their bikes across the 
tracks, even as trains were within view, toddlers lingered a mere meter, or 
about four feet, from the train thundering past, and vegetable sellers sat at 
the edges of tracks. Often, I observed this lack of safety from an open doorway 
of a speeding train. On a journey from Goa to Londa, Karnataka I was eventually 
asked to move by a guard who explained that a few moments before, someone had 
fallen out of the door.
Setting anecdotal evidence aside, the facts and figure are indicative of the 
issues facing the railways. According to a report by the Kakodkar Committee– 
set up by the government after a derailment last July – India still has 14,869 
unmanned level crossings which contribute to an estimated 15,000 deaths every 
year – an average of 40 deaths every day. “No civilized society can accept such 
massacre on their railway system,” the report said.

European Pressphoto Agency
Villagers and security personnel at the site of the accident involving a 
passenger train in Sathi Sarapa village, Assam in this Feb. 3, 2012 file photo. 
According to reports three persons were killed in the accident.

Since Mr Trivedi resigned, two train accidents occurred, one in Hathras in 
Uttar Pradesh and one on the outskirts of Lucknow, resulting in a total of 16 
deaths and 4 critically injured people.
Mr Trivedi said during the interview he had planned to hire 200,000 people to 
deal with overall safety.  “I wanted to eliminate the railway crossings and 
introduce the overbridge and underbridge,” he said. “I had proposed a separate 
organization only to do this, and now where is this money going to come from?”
It’s clear when you are traveling the trains that India’s railways need serious 
spending, not just to improve safety but to keep from falling apart. Many 
carriages currently in use date from the late 1980s, and parts of them may be 
older than that. On the Rajdhani Express from Delhi to Chennai I drew the 
compartment door shut and watched as the bolt and locks fell off. A government 
official from the Lok Sabha, who happened to be traveling in the compartment 
with me, eyed the broken door: “Many of these trains are cut-and-paste jobs. 
The carriage will be a rajdhani and the compartment will be fitted from an old 
mail train.” He shrugged. “Until it falls apart, they will make do.” He 
declined to be quoted.
The current number of trains can no longer cope with the increasing pressure 
from operating above capacity. Bookings open 90 days in advance and yet 
overcrowding and double-booking is still a problem.
After being assigned R.A.C., or reserved against cancellation tickets on an 
overnight train from Pune to Delhi, which mean passengers are guaranteed a seat 
but not a berth, I watched as fellow passengers coaxed the train ticket 
examiner into finding available berths, using 500-rupee notes slotted between 
their fingers. Unwilling to resort to bribery, my traveling companion spent the 
night sleeping in the laundry cupboard.
Rats and cockroaches are a severe problem, largely due to a lack of garbage 
cans and adequate cleaners. One a trip from Kottayam to Coimbatore, a friend 
who was traveling with me glanced down at the floor, wide-eyed, to my empty tea 
cup. “There’s a mouse at your tea bag,” he said. I reassured him that this was 
the norm and it scurried off, only to reappear at dinner to nibble the remains 
of chapattis under the seat.
Where money has been invested the positive effect is evident. The new fleet of 
Duronto express trains introduced in September 2009 is faster, offering more 
comfort and space with the added benefit of being derailment-proof. Executive 
class in the Chandigarh-Delhi shatabdi, a superfast train that leaves and 
returns to base in one day, looks no different than the Eurostar.
The second- and third-tier tickets that you need to buy to ride these new 
trains cost about six times the price of general class tickets, making them 
available only to the upper classes. Going from Pune to Delhi in a Duronto 
would cost 1455 rupees, while a general class ticket in the Jhelum Express, 
which has not been updated, would be 234 rupees. Train travel is still a 
bargain compared to airline travel, though. The most expensive train ticket 
between Delhi and Chennai, on the Duronto, is 4125 rupees compared with a 
flight at 7,375 rupees on SpiceJet.
On an overnight train from Jodhpur to Jaisalmer, traveling in general class, 
two of the four toilets flooded, forcing 72 people to share two toilets over a 
period of six hours with no signs of repairs. More worrying, on three separate 
occasions the emergency windows in general class refused to open.
“There is too much politics in rail, and a trend to discourage any kind of 
modernization. It is a sad story,” Mr Trivedi lamented. “If the railway is not 
robust, the economy of India will not grow.”
Monisha Rajesh’s book Around India in 80 Trains will be published by Roli Books 
later this year.




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