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RAILWAY SAFETY
The Morning Standard
|March 10, 2025
After the February 15 stampede, Railways faces the daunting task of ensuring safety and efficiency. Shekhar Singh, Prabhat Shukla, & Nitin Rawat outline key priorities for the Indian Railways, assessing the urgent needs in crucial sectors to enhance passenger safety and streamline operations
Weeks after the devastating stampede at New Delhi Railway station that claimed 18 lives, authorities have implemented a series of measures to prevent another catastrophe. But the critical question remains—are these steps enough? If faced with another surge of passengers, will the system hold, or will history repeat itself ? Have the lessons truly been learned, or are commuters still at risk?
The catastrophic stampede at New Delhi Railway station on February 15 exposed glaring inefficiencies in crowd management at one of India’s busiest railway hubs. eighteen lives were lost in a nightmarish crush of bodies—a grim testament to the station’s chronic chaos, negligence, and official apathy. This was not just an accident; it was a disaster waiting to happen.
For years, the New Delhi Railway station has been a pressure cooker of disorder, where thousands of passengers struggle with overcrowding, poor regulation, and an infrastructure that buckles under its own inefficiency. Daily commuters are accustomed to the frenzied scramble, endless queues, and desperate dashes for trains—an ordeal that turns perilous during peak hours and festive seasons. Yet, despite repeated warnings and past mishaps, authorities have failed to implement meaningful reforms.
A TRAGEDY BORN OF NEGLECT
Between 6 pm and 8 pm on February 15, the station witnessed an unmanageable surge of passengers. Nearly 10,000 people booked unreserved tickets—2,500 more than usual. This influx, largely driven by kumbh devotees returning home, funneled a dangerously high volume of foot traffic onto just two platforms. What followed was inevitable. A bottleneck formed, passengers surged forward, and in the chaos, people were trampled underfoot.
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