Indian railway authorities cancelled all night trains in an eastern Indian state today after a passenger express train derailed and was hit by a cargo train, killing at least 108 people and injuring hundreds.
The government accused Maoist rebels of sabotaging the tracks.
Railway workers and paramilitary soldiers used cranes to lift and pry apart train cars to pull out more bodies from the Jnaneswari Express, which was heading from Calcutta to suburban Mumbai when it derailed early yesterday.
"The death toll has reached 108 with some more bodies being pulled out from the debris today," said Surojit Kar Purkayastha, state inspector-general of police.
More than 140 people with injuries were in hospitals in towns near the accident site, officials said,
Railway officials said some bodies were still trapped between the engines of the two trains, which smashed together near the small town of Sardiha, about 90 miles (150 kilometers) west of Calcutta in West Bengal state.
Rescue workers had not yet cut open a badly smashed train car where they expected to find still more bodies, Mr Purkayastha said. The work of removing the debris and pulling out the bodies was hampered by swarms of flies and the stench of corpses quickly decomposing in the humid heat, officials said.
Railway authorities said they would not run any trains at night in West Bengal for at least the next four days, when Indian Maoist rebels have called a general strike.
The area is a stronghold of the rebels, known as Naxalites, who have launched repeated and often-audacious attacks in recent months - despite government claims of a crackdown.
AP