India train crash: More than 288 dead after Odisha accident
At least 288 people have been killed and 1000 are injured in a crash involving three trains in India's eastern Odisha state, officials say.
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One passenger train derailed and its coaches fell on to the adjacent track where they were struck by an incoming train on Friday evening. A freight train was stationary.
The rescue operation at the crash site has ended, officials said.
The cause of India's worst train crash this century is not yet clear.
Officials said several carriages from the Shalimar-Chennai Coromandel Express derailed at about 19:00 (13:30 GMT) in Balasore district, hit a stationary goods train and several of its coaches ended up on the opposite track.
Another train - the Howrah Superfast Express travelling from Yesvantpur to Howrah - then hit the overturned carriages.
"The force with which the trains collided has resulted in several coaches being crushed and mangled," Atul Karwal, chief of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) told news agency ANI.
It was the third deadliest crash in the history of Indian railways, he said.
More than 200 ambulances and hundreds of doctors, nurses and rescue personnel were sent to the scene, the state's chief secretary Pradeep Jena said.
Sudhanshu Sarangi, director general of Odisha Fire Services, had earlier said` 288 had died.
The rescue operation recovering people from the wreckage has finished and work to restore the site of the crash begun, India's South Eastern Railway company said on Saturday.
Railway Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw is at the site of the accident and Prime Minister Narendra Modi is expected to visit the injured in hospital later on Saturday.
One male survivor said that "10 to 15 people fell on me when the accident happened and everything went haywire. I was at the bottom of the pile.
"I got hurt in my hand and also the back of my neck. When I came out, I saw someone had lost their hand, someone had lost their leg, while someone's face was distorted," the survivor told India's ANI news agency.
A day of mourning has been announced in the state.
India's deadly train crashes
June 1981: Nearly 800 people died when seven of the nine coaches of an overcrowded train fell into a river during a cyclone
August 1995: At least 350 people are killed when two trains collide 200km (125 miles) from Delhi
August 1999: Two trains collide near Kolkata (formerly Calcutta) killing at least 285 people
October 2005: 77 people are killed when a train derails in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh
November 2016: Nearly 150 people are killed and an equal number are injured when 14 carriages of the Indore-Patna Express train derail near the city of Kanpur
Residents of the neighbouring villages were among the first to reach the site of the accident and start the rescue operation.
Some surviving passengers were seen rushing in to help rescue those trapped in the wreckage.
Local bus companies were also helping to transport wounded passengers.
India has one of the largest train networks in the world with millions of passengers using it daily, but a lot of the railway infrastructure needs improving.
India's worst train disaster was in 1981, when an overcrowded passenger train was blown off the tracks and into a river during a cyclone in Bihar state, killing at least 800 people.
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