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Railways Face Glitz Or Safety Option

The New Indian Express Mysuru

|

June 29, 2025

A fatal accident and a major project delay has reignited issues that have plagued the Indian Railways.

- GURBIR SINGH

Earlier this month, as many as 5 Mumbai commuters were killed when two overloaded trains traveling in opposite directions came dangerously close on a turn between two suburban stations. Those hanging out on footboards brushed each other and many fell off.

In an unrelated development, three giant-sized tunnel boring machines (TBMs), on order to drill an underground route for a 21-kilometer stretch of the Mumbai-Ahmedabad high-speed rail corridor, have been held up at a Chinese port. The ground-breaking ceremony for the project was performed way back in September 2017 by Prime Minister Modi and then Japanese PM Shinzo Abe. However, issues mainly related to land acquisition have slowed the project.

Now, the TBMs have added to the delay. Built in Guangzhou, China by German tunneling specialist Herrenknecht, they were to reach India by October 2024, but clearance from the Chinese authorities has not come. Meanwhile, project cost has almost doubled to Rs 1.08 lakh crore, and completion of the new rail corridor has been pushed back to 2029.

The massive Mumbai suburban train accident, and the lack of funds for improving safety, on the one hand, while huge funds are allocated to what P Chidambaram called 'vanity projects' like the Bullet Train, is triggering serious debate.

Mumbai's death trap

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