Aurangabad railway accident

On the morning of 8 May 2020, an empty goods train ran over and killed 16 migrant workers sleeping on or by the tracks near Aurangabad, Maharashtra, India. One additional worker sleeping nearby was injured.

Background
The Indian government announced a nationwide lockdown on 24 March to control the COVID-19 pandemic in India. This caused job losses for migrant workers in multiple cities, many of whom have no formal contracts. The government stopped train services, making it difficult for these labourers to travel home. Consequently, many of them had to walk home.

Accident
A group of 20 labourers were walking from steel factories in Jalna, Maharashtra, to Bhusawal so that they could board a "Shramik Special" train to reach their homes in Umariya and Shahdol districts of Madhya Pradesh. After walking 40 km along a minor road, they reached the railway tracks at Badnapur at about 0330 hours on 8 May 2020. Exhausted, they slept on and near the tracks, believing that no trains were running due to the lockdown.

An empty goods train from Cherlapally in Hyderabad was heading towards Paniwada in Maharashtra. The locomotive driver realised that people were laying on the tracks only 160 m away from them. The train was moving at 70 kph, and despite applying the emergency brakes, it was unable to stop before hitting the workers. The 14 sleeping on the tracks were killed instantly, while three nearby were injured, two of whom later died in hospital. Just four from the group of twenty survived, three of whom were sleeping away from the tracks.

Aftermath
Indian Railways ordered an inquiry to be headed by the Commissioner of Railway Safety. The Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh state governments announced inr 500000 as compensation for the relatives of the deceased victims.

The bodies of the sixteen migrant labourers were moved to Jabalpur by two bogies attached to a special train.

Reactions
Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed anguish and offered "all possible assistance". Rahul Gandhi asked why migrants were still walking home and stated that “we should be ashamed of treating the nation-builders like this”.

CPI-M General Secretary Sitaram Yechury tweeted, “the death of these poor labourers is solely due to the sudden announcement of a lockdown and denial of transport to them for weeks, while not providing a substantive relief package”. He described the Central government's actions towards migrant workers as "criminal". CPI General Secretary D Raja said that "migrant workers are being treated in a most inhumane manner by the government". Terming the deaths a 'deliberate killing', he accused the government of having "practically left them to fend for themselves without any aid or help”.

Former Finance Minister and Indian National Congress member P. Chidambaram accused the Central and State governments of being oblivious of the fact that thousands of migrant workers were still walking back to their home states. Shiv Sena minister Sandipan Bhumre and MLA Ambadas Danve met the survivor in hospital.