No Holds Barred: The Horrifying Train Crash Must Not End With Just Three Suspects
A freight train collided with a bus at a Bangkok railway crossing, killing eight and injuring over 30; police charged three suspects including a heroin-using train operator, but experts warn systemic safety reforms are essential to prevent
Major progress has been made in investigating the cause and identifying those responsible for the freight train collision with an air-conditioned bus on Route 206 at the Makkasan railway crossing on Asok-Din Daeng Road in Bangkok, which resulted in a fire, eight deaths, and over 30 injuries, with additional vehicles severely damaged. This shocking incident in a densely trafficked city with multiple railway crossings raises serious concerns about public transport safety systems. If such loose safety protocols continue, similar disasters could happen again at any time. Police have now formally charged three parties: the train operator who failed to stop despite warnings, the railway crossing guard, and the bus driver, all sharing responsibility for negligent failures. More seriously, drug testing of the train operator revealed he regularly uses heroin and cannabis. When all three parties fail and act negligently at the same time—like a Swiss cheese model of accidents—disaster results. The railway should enforce strict warning systems acknowledging when the road crossing remains blocked due to traffic congestion, and must automatically reduce speed at this intersection where vehicles constantly block the tracks. The red flag worker must perform duties diligently, as footage clearly shows many vehicles parked across the tracks. The bus driver is certainly at fault for parking across the railway, violating traffic laws and creating danger. While all three parties should be charged, a disaster of this magnitude causing multiple deaths and widespread damage cannot end with just three suspects. Supervisory personnel who failed in oversight should also be held accountable. Most critically, safety systems in this area and other congested railway crossings throughout the city must be completely overhauled. Traffic management must be improved to reduce congestion; vehicles from branch roads must not be allowed to squeeze through and force through-traffic to back up across the railway. Ultimately, systematic solutions are needed—either grade-separated crossings with bridges or tunnels. Most importantly, communication systems with trains must be effective and provide genuine warnings kilometers in advance. A tragedy this severe and heartbreaking cannot merely be a passing incident.