The bus was returning from Nankana Sahib to Lahore
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Lahore(Agencies): At
least 19 pilgrims of Pakistan's Sikh community were killed when a train
collided with a passenger van in eastern Pakistan on Friday, officials said.
According to police, the dead,
which include two children, were all residents of the western Pakistani city of
Peshawar, home to most of Pakistan's nearly 40,000 Sikhs.
The accident occurred at an
unmanned Railway crossing close to the city of Sheikhupura in Pakistan's
largest province, Punjab, Pakistan Railways public relations official
Quratulain told Reuters.
The 19 killed were all
passengers seated in the van, travelling from the town of Nankana Sahib to
Farooqabad—both sites revered by followers of Sikhism.
Sikhs revere Nankana Sahib,
located near the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore, which borders India, as the
place their religion began and where the founder of Sikhism, Guru Nanak, was
born in 1469.
Pakistan's Prime Minister
Imran Khan expressed dismay at the accident in a message on Twitter.
As prime minister, Khan has
overseen the construction of a special border crossing, called the
"Kartarpur corridor", allowing Sikhs from India to visit holy sites
in Pakistan, despite continued hostile relations between the two countries.
Khan also said Pakistan's
railway safety would be reviewed.
Pakistan's railways have
witnessed a number of accidents over the last few years, including frequent
collisions between vehicles and trains.
Last year, a fire in a train
compartment killed more than 70 passengers.
"Investigations are
underway to figure out negligence behind it," a district police officer
Ghazi Salahuddin told Reuters.
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