BHUBANESWAR, India, July 4 (Reuters) - Workers repairing a rail-road barrier in India made faulty connections in the automated signalling system on the network, leading to the country's worst rail disaster in two decades, an official probe has found.
The June 2 crash at Bahanaga Bazar station, in the eastern Indian state of Odisha, killed 288 people and injured more than 1,000.
The disaster struck when a passenger train hit a stationary freight train, jumped off the tracks and hit another passenger train coming from the opposite direction.
The malfunctioning system directed the passenger train onto the path of the freight train, it said.
Indian Railways, the fourth largest train network in the world, is a state monopoly run by the Railway Board.
Persons:
Narendra Modi's, Jatindra Dash, Krishn Kaushik, Sudipto Ganguly, Raju Gopalakrishnan
Organizations:
Workers, Reuters, of Railway Safety, CRS, Local, Railways, Railway Board, Railways Ministry, Thomson
Locations:
BHUBANESWAR, India, Bahanaga Bazar, Odisha, New Delhi, Mumbai