Service on the northern train line to Chiang Mai will be
suspended for 45 days starting from Monday, as the State Railway of Thailand
(SRT) carries out badly needed repairs after a dozen accidents this year.
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Staff members attend a ceremony on Saturday to mark the 117th anniversary of
the State Railway of Thailand. (Photo by Pattarapong Chatpatarasill)
All northbound trains from Bangkok will end at Sila At station in Muang
district of Uttaradit from Monday until Oct 31, the SRT said.
The closure affects all rapid and express trains to and from the popular
northern city. Travellers will have to take buses or other transport to Chiang
Mai.
Regular service will resume on Nov 1 and by then SRT governor Prapat
Chongsanguan has promised no more derailments.
The SRT is providing free bus service on Transport Co vehicles to Chiang Mai
from Sila At only for passengers who reserved their tickets before Sept 6, the
day that the railway agency announced the closure. That same day it stopped
selling tickets to other stations beyond Sila At, an SRT Call Centre official
explained on Saturday.
Passengers can contact the SRT at 1690 for more details.
The service suspension comes after 13 accidents on the northern tracks this
year. The last one was on Sept 5 when an express train to Bangkok from Chiang
Mai jumped the tracks in Long district of Phrae province.
All accidents on the northern tracks occurred on the section between
Uttaradit and Lamphun, and have been attributed to the mountainous terrain, and
old tracks and sleepers which need urgent maintenance.
An express train to Chiang Mai jumped off the tracks in Denchai district of
Phrae on Aug 3 in one of the 13 accidents on the northern line this year. (Photo
by Thaweesak Sukkhasem)
The government has set aside a budget of 2.8 billion baht to fix the tracks
and sleepers on the 300-kilometre stretch between Uttaradit and Chiang Mai.
The SRT originally planned to make repairs step by step while continuing to
provide service in order to not cause trouble for passengers on northern trains.
But the number of accidents this year forced it to shut down the entire service
at length.
The financially ailing state rail operator has been battered by accidents
this year, the latest one on Friday when the express train from Butterworth,
Malaysia, derailed shortly after leaving Bang Sue junction in Bangkok for Sam
Saen station.
An SRT report shows 114 train derailments - some major but many minor
incidents that escaped media attention - took place from January to last Friday.
The figure is up sharply from last year when only 89 accidents were reported
over the 12-month period.
Railway officials led by Transport Minister Chadchart Suttipunt and the SRT
governor attended a merit-making ceremony at the head office near Hua Lamphong
on Saturday as the SRT celebrated its 117th year. The event was also intended to
boost sagging staff morale in the wake of the numerous accidents.
Mr Prapat admitted that train passengers' confidence had been plunging and
blamed a budget shortage and old tracks on the problems. The lack of government
attention partly caused the accidents, he said.
"Governments have placed a priority on road expansion and maintenance," he
said. "Budgets requested by the railway agency have always been slashed because
the decision makers on the budget didn't understand the problems of railway
transport.
"The train is the safest mode of transport and that is possible only when it
is regularly maintained."
He said on Friday that the agency was looking for an artist to restore a
48-year-old painting at the SRT headquarters amid rumours that the damaged
artwork was a bad omen that had caused accidents.
The SRT was set up in the reign of King Rama V. Thai railways are among the
oldest in Asia and development is going in a slow mode. The country has a train
network of 4,043 kilometres, 93% of it single tracks. The rest are either the
double or triple tracks.
Passenger traffic on the rail system has fallen by 40% since 1992 and freight
traffic has dropped 30% since 2002, according to a report by the Asian
Development Bank.
The SRT has 100 billion baht in accumulated losses and has not done
maintenance on some parts of its network for 30 years. Its rolling stock is in
equally poor repair and the subject of frequent complaints about
cleanliness.
The government intends to overhaul the country's rail system at a cost of
1.12 trillion baht as part of its 2-trillion-baht infrastructure programme. As
part of the upgrade, the SRT would be asked to set up a separate agency to run a
new high-speed rail business.
The SRT employs about 10,000 people, down from 30,000 earlier. A lot of its
accumulated debt stems from pension obligations.
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