Indian authorities have appealed to families to help identify over 100 unclaimed bodies kept in hospitals and mortuaries after 275 people were killed in the country's deadliest rail crash in over two decades.
The disaster happened on Friday when a passenger train hit a stationary freight train, jumped the tracks and hit another passenger train passing in the opposite direction near the district of Balasore in the eastern state of Odisha.
Following non-stop efforts to rescue survivors and clear and repair the track, trains resumed running over that section of the line on Sunday night.
Around 100 bodies have yet to be identified, a senior state health department official said.
Bijay Kumar Mohapatra, health director of Odisha, said authorities were trying to source iced containers to help preserve the bodies.
"Unless they are identified, a post mortem cannot be done," he said, explaining that under Odisha state regulations no post-mortem examination can be conducted on an unclaimed body until 96 hours has passed.
At state capital Bhubaneswar's biggest hospital, the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), large television screens displayed pictures of the dead to help desperate families who are scouring hospitals and mortuaries for friends and relatives.
A detailed list was made of distinguishing features for each body, but relatives could first view photographs to identify missing loved ones, a senior police official said.
The trains had passengers from several states and officials from seven states - Assam, Bihar, Jharkhand, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh - were in Balasore to help people claim the bodies and take the dead home, the official added.
India's Railway Board has recommended that the federal Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) takes over the inquiry into the cause of the disaster while a separate inquiry, led by AM Chowdhary, commissioner of railway safety for the south-eastern circle, started yesterday.
The CBI team will reach the site today and start its investigation.
Railway police filed a case of criminal negligence, without naming any suspects.
A signal failure was the likely cause of the disaster, according to preliminary findings, which indicated the Coromandel Express, heading southbound to Chennai from Kolkata, moved off the main line and entered a loop track - a side track used to park trains - at 128km/h, crashing into the stationary freight train.
That crash caused the engine and first four or five coaches of the Coromandel Express to jump the tracks, topple and hit the last two coaches of the Yeshwantpur-Howrah train heading in the opposite direction at 126km/h on the second main track.