
31% of railway accident deaths in 17 years in Mumbai remain unidentified: Data
The unclaimed bodies include homeless individuals, daily wage earners, mentally unwell persons, and migrant labourers, said Government Railway Police (GRP) officials, who are meant to be dealing with these cases. 'When we do come across an unidentified body after an accident, our usual practice is to hold it at the morgue for seven days. But depending on circumstances, we try to hold it for 30 or even 45 days if there is a possibility of identification,' a senior GRP officer told The Indian Express.
Pictures of the victims are shared among police circles all over Maharashtra, personal belongings are screened, fingerprints are taken, and attempts are made to cross-check with any police records. Hair, nails, or tissue samples are even saved for DNA matching in some instances. Yet, most bodies remain unidentified despite this.
From GRP reports, the circumstances of the victims usually make the identification difficult. 'A majority of them are ragpickers, beggars or mentally ill individuals with nothing on them to identify them. Frequently, there is no phone, no ID, nobody to inquire about them,' the official explained. Some bodies are injured beyond recognition so visual identification becomes impossible.
A few years ago, the GRP maintained a site, 'Shodh,' that posted pictures and information about unidentified victims of accidents. It served to trace missing family members, but the initiative later closed down.
Even though they remain anonymous in death and life, the GRP tries to treat unclaimed bodies with respect. After all efforts to identify them fail, cremation is performed, and a cash memo is drafted with the costs incurred. The bodies are cremated based on religious identity, wherever possible.
Medical institutions, once in a while, ask to use the unclaimed bodies for study. The GRP provides temporary custody for research, provided that the body will be returned in the same condition for decent cremation afterwards.
Nevertheless, a few instances of success exist. 'In just 5 to 10 per cent of the instances, the families come looking for their missing loved ones after the cremation has already been done. They were usually abandoned in the first place, or even their families do not know they are gone,' a Railway Protection Force (RPF) personnel said.
Rail activist Samir Zaveri, who lost his legs in a suburban train crash decades ago, has been agitating for railway safety and accountability for decades. He believes that the figures only show half the picture. 'Most people who travel on the railway system are from weaker sections of society. They might not have any close relatives in Mumbai. If they die, there is no one to look for them,' he said.
It is not just a matter of missing people, but also the system not having identification tools that help, said Zaveri. 'Much of these deaths could have been recorded better, and the dead could have been identified if we used the technology smartly,' he said.
Aadhaar Access Could Help, Say Police
Identification could become easier and faster if law enforcement agencies could get Aadhaar biometric data accessible to them, says GRP.
According to the officials, with the Aadhaar Act, 2016, in place, the police may not be allowed to access the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) database directly. However, police are of the view that a middle path could be found.
'We don't want complete access. But if Aadhaar officials can come to our morgues with biometric machines in their bags and confirm identities by fingerprints, it would save us time, effort, and money,' a senior GRP inspector said, requesting anonymity.
The possible advantages being obvious, some of the victims who end up on the tracks might have signed up for an Aadhaar. The scanning of their fingerprints might bring up their identity instantly, enabling the police to alert their family members and put an end to a death that would be otherwise reduced to a statistic in an annual report.
Zaveri said the authorities need to use a portable biometric device with Aadhaar-linked fingerprint and iris recognition software. 'This would verify identity on the spot. It will provide dignity to the deceased and closure to their families, wherever they may be,' he added.
The present system is one of manual coordination between GRP, hospitals, and municipal bodies. There is no standard cremation cost. It will depend on the ambulance fee, storage charges, and crematorium fees. All this is coordinated by GRP officers who have to keep a database of the dead, complete with photos and fingerprints, even after they have been cremated.
In extremely rare instances, families do appear once the last rites have been carried out. In those situations, the GRP makes reference to the records, items, and biological specimens stored in anticipation of future identification.
Recognising the issue, a senior official from Central Railway said, 'This is a humanitarian concern that requires technological help and coordination between agencies. The objective should be not to let any death remain unrecognised.'
Recently, there has also been a decrease in the number of unclaimed bodies left behind. The RPF officials maintain that steps like fencing, CCTV monitoring, and longer foot overbridges have minimised trespassing-related deaths and dwelling on the tracks.
'The number of ragpickers and homeless people near the railway tracks has decreased in recent times, and hence their deaths have come down, bringing down the untraced bodies,' an RPF officer added.
But deaths from overcrowding, falls while boarding or getting off moving trains, and trespassing also continue. Unless systemic changes are made, including investments in identification systems and improved coordination, the issue of unclaimed deaths will persist, experts said. 'Every human being who dies should have a name, a family and dignity in death. The system needs to change to allow that,' Zaveri added.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New Indian Express
12 hours ago
- New Indian Express
Three, including two nuns, held for human trafficking in Chhattisgarh
RAIPUR: Three persons, including two Catholic nuns who had reportedly come from Agra, were arrested by the Government Railway Police (GRP) in Durg on Friday for alleged human trafficking amid suspicion of coerced religious conversion. They were remanded to 14-day judicial custody, a police officer said. The trio were booked under BNS Section 143 (trafficking of persons). All three were caught accompanying three young women aged between 18 and 20 years, hailing from Narayanpur district in south Bastar, after Bajrang Dal activists spotted them at Durg railway station. The group was allegedly preparing to travel to Agra for training and subsequent employment opportunities. Bajrang Dal members staged demonstrations at the Durg GRP police station demanding strict action against those allegedly involved in human trafficking and forced religious conversion. 'The nuns had come to Durg merely a day before without any valid reason. They were about to board a train along with the rescued girls to Agra when we spotted them,' said Ravi Nigam, a Bajrang Dal leader. Members of the Christian community also gathered at the GRP Durg station and were seen defending the nuns. The two nuns — Preeti Marry and Vandana Francis — who had come from Agra, along with Sukhman Mandavi from Narayanpur, were produced before a local court in Durg and remanded to 14-day judicial custody. The rescued girls have been sent to the Sakhi One Stop Centre in Durg. Meanwhile, Congress MP K C Venugopal has written to Union Home Minister Amit Shah and Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai seeking stringent action against the perpetrators. He also urged the government to uphold constitutional rights and religious freedom in the state. The Congress leader alleged that BJP-ruled states are witnessing a rampant rise in attacks on minorities. 'The latest attacks by Bajrang Dal goons on two Catholic nuns in Durg, Chhattisgarh, point to a tacit support for such hate crimes from the ruling establishment,' Venugopal wrote on X.


News18
13 hours ago
- News18
UP: Train passenger travelling with over Rs 29 lakh cash held
Chandauli (UP), Jul 27 (PTI) A man travelling in the Gurumukhi Express train with Rs 29.67 lakh cash was arrested by the GRP and RPF sleuths in Mughalsarai on Sunday evening, officials said. Mafijul Sheikh, a resident of West Bengal's Birbhum district, was nabbed at the DDU junction after he could not produce any valid documents related to the huge amount of cash he was carrying, they said. Sunil Singh, GRP station in-charge of Pandit Deendayal Upadhyay Railway Station, said he received information that a large amount of money was being taken to West Bengal by Gurumukhi Express. Following this, he started a special surveillance at the station along with RPF and as soon as the train reached the platform, the team started searching, he said. During this, a young man travelling in the general bogie of the train was found suspicious. Upon searching him, the officials found bundles of notes amounting to a total of Rs 29.67 lakh from the bag he was carrying, Singh said. During questioning, Sheikh told officials that he had boarded the train from Moradabad and was taking the money to West Bengal. view comments First Published: July 28, 2025, 00:15 IST Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.


Time of India
14 hours ago
- Time of India
HC notice on woman's plea
Kendrapada: Orissa high court on July 21 issued a notice to Odisha Information Commission, state information commissioner, public information officer of the regulated market committee (RMC), Jajpur, and first appellate authority of RMC on a writ petition filed by Shantilata Sahoo, a resident of Jajpur district, challenging a decision of the information commissioner in an RTI case. The petitioner had moved the state information commissioner seeking details regarding disciplinary action taken against her husband, a former employee of RMC, under the RTI Act. Despite directions from the first appellate authority to provide full information, the RMC allegedly failed to comply. In its May 15 reply, the information commissioner said RMC is not a 'public authority' under the RTI Act, 2005, and hence not obliged to furnish the information sought. Challenging it, the petitioner, represented by advocate Akhand, moved the high court seeking to set aside the information commissioner's decision. In her writ petition, Sahoo argued that RMCs were established by the state govt under the Orissa Agricultural Produce Markets Act, 1956, and hence fall within the definition of "public authority" under Section 2(h) of the RTI Act. When the matter came up for hearing on July 21, Justice V Narasingh stated, "The counsel of the petitioner submits that without due application of mind, the appeal was dismissed. In such view of the matter, issue notice to all the four opposite parties."