| 18 train fire victims yet to be identified |
HYDERABAD Eighteen of the 32 people who died in the Tamil Nadu Express fire in Andhra Pradesh on Monday are yet to be unidentified even as a forensic team on Tuesday inspected the gutted coach.
Relatives of missing passengers, who are believed to have perished in the disaster, are reaching Nellore, where the tragedy struck, for identification. Railway officials said only 14 of the 32 dead have been identified. At least 32 people were killed and 27 were injured when a coach of the New Delhi-Chennai super fast express train caught fire early on Monday near Nellore railway station.
The bodies of the victims were shifted from Nellore railway station to government hospital in the town, about 450km from here.
Railway officials said the bodies would be kept at the hospital till Tuesday evening to enable the relatives to identify them. The bodies will later be shifted to Perambur railway hospital in Tamil Nadu. All arrangements were made to preserve the bodies at the railway hospital.
Since majority of the bodies were charred beyond recognition, the identification has become a tough task. The authorities were also preparing for DNA test on the bodies to ascertain the claims of their relatives before handing over the remains.
The relatives are facing the mental trauma of identifying the skeletal remains bundled in white cloth. Some of them were agitated over the failure of railway authorities to at least provide them information.
Of the 14 bodies identified so far, six were from Andhra Pradesh, five from Chennai and three from Amritsar.
Meanwhile, a team of forensic experts visited Nellore railway station and inspected the gutted S11 coach as part of the investigations. The team would collect the samples and submit their finding to railway officials, conducting the probe.
Agencies
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