India will launch an investigation on Tuesday into a train collision that killed nine people in the state of West Bengal and injured more than 50, a day after a top railway official blamed the incident on driver error. The death toll was revised down to nine from 15 after Monday's accident, in which a freight train rammed into a passenger train heading for the state capital of Kolkata from the northeastern state of Tripura. The investigation by India's top railway safety official will start on Tuesday, Chetan Kumar Shrivastava, general manager of the Northeast Frontier railway, where the accident happened, told Reuters.
Both Conservative and Labour plan to reduce government investment over the next parliamentary term
The ex-PM’s intervention comes as polls point to voters deserting the Conservatives for Nigel Farage’s Reform in significant numbers
Thru | Total | Purse | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | F | -6 | $4,300,000 | |
![]() | F | -5 | $2,322,000 | |
![]() | F | -4 | $1,229,051 | |
![]() | F | -4 | $1,229,051 | |
![]() | F | -3 | $843,765 | |
![]() | F | -2 | $748,154 | |
![]() | F | -1 | $639,289 | |
![]() | F | -1 | $639,289 | |
![]() | F | E | $502,391 | |
![]() | F | E | $502,391 |