NATIONAL

Audit Report From Last Year Flagged Serious Concerns On Rail Safety

New Delhi: 

While Railway Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw today said the “root cause” of the horrific triple train collision in Odisha’s Balasore, which claimed 275 lives and injured over 1,000 people, has been identified and will be revealed soon in a report, critics have pointed to an audit report of the railways tabled in the Parliament in September last year, which flagged several serious lapses in rail safety. The accident happened due to a change in “electronic interlocking”, Mr Vaishnaw has said. The Railway Board has also detailed the sequence of events leading to the crash.

India’s top auditing body, the Comptroller and Auditor General of India, in a 2022 report on derailments in Indian Railways sought to find out whether measures to prevent derailments and collisions were clearly laid down and implemented by the rail ministry. It flagged severe shortfalls in inspections, failure to submit or accept inquiry reports after accidents, not utilising a dedicated railway fund on priority tasks, declining trend in funding track renewal, and inadequate staffing in safety operations as serious concerns.

“There were shortfalls ranging from 30-100 per cent in inspections by Track Recording Cars required to assess geometrical and structural conditions of railway tracks,” it said. 

The report also pointed to failures in the Track Management System, which is being widely discussed after the Odisha train crash.

“Track Management System (TMS) is a web-based application for online monitoring of track maintenance activities. The in-built monitoring mechanism of the TMS portal was, however, not found to be operational,” it said.

From April 2017 to March 2021, 422 derailments were attributable to the ‘Engineering Department’. The major factor responsible for derailment was related to the ‘maintenance of track’ (171 cases), followed by ‘deviation of track parameters beyond permissible limits’ (156 cases), the report said, adding that ‘bad driving/over speeding’ was the major factor responsible for derailments.

The number of accidents attributable to the ‘Operating Department’ was 275. ‘Incorrect setting of points and other mistakes in shunting operations’ accounted for 84 per cent, the CAG found.

“Most of the derailments occurred due to simultaneous failures of each of the five barriers namely (i) Rules and Joint Procedure Orders (JPOs), (ii) Training/Counselling of staff, (iii) Supervision of operations, (iv) Coordination and communication between staff of different departments and (v) Scheduled Inspections,” the report said.

The ‘inquiry reports’ were not submitted to the accepting authority within the prescribed time schedule in 63 per cent of cases and in 49 per cent of cases, there was a delay in the acceptance 

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