Lahore: At least 19 Pakistani Sikh pilgrims were killed when a mini-bus carrying them rammed into a passenger train at a railway crossing in Pakistan’s Punjab province on Friday, officials said.
There have been conflicting reports about the death toll as police and rescue officials confirmed 20 dead while the railways put the figure at 15. But the Evacuee Trust Property Board (ETPB) insisted that a total of 29 people, including 19 Sikh pilgrims, lost their lives in the accident.
However, the police and ETPB confirmed that the dead included 19 Sikhs who belonged to Peshawar.
The mini-bus carrying Sikh pilgrims, who were returning from Nankana Sahib in Punjab, hit the Shah Hussain Express which was coming from Karachi to Lahore at a crossing near Sheikhupura district at around 1.30 pm, officials said.
“The bus was carrying mostly Sikh pilgrims to Gurdwara Sacha Sauda in Farooqabad in the district. They had come to Nankana Sahib from Peshawar. After staying in Nanakana Sahib, they were leaving for Peshawar. The ETPB security had escorted them till the limits of Nankana Sahib,” ETPB spokesperson Amir Hashmi told PTI.
Senior police officer Ghazi Salahuddin told reporters at the crash site that some 26 people were travelling in the bus when it hit the moving train.
Twenty passengers died that included women and children, he said, adding the gate at the crossing was closed and it seemed the driver tried to take a shortcut instead of waiting for the gate to open. He denied the reports that the crossing was unmanned.
The Pakistan Railways, however, in a statement said that the mini-bus collided with the train at the unmanned crossing, killing 15 people. (PTI)