Dozens killed in India train fire

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At least 32 people have been killed after a passenger train caught fire in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, the railway ministry says.

The fire, which started as the Gautami Express was passing through forest some 125 miles (200km) north of Hyderabad, has also left eight passengers injured.

Police said an electric short circuit might have been to blame.

India's state-run railways which carry more than 13 million passengers have a poor safety record.

Coaches gutted

Five coaches of the train were gutted in the fire, said police in Warangal district where the blaze broke out.

"The fire started from S-10 coach of the Gautami Express at around 1:10 am local time (2040 GMT)," senior police officer VC Sajjanar told the BBC.

Millions travel by trains in India every day

"The passengers pulled the chain to stop the train immediately after the fire broke out and people started jumping out of the train."

Among the dead were three handicapped people and a woman, police said. The federal railway ministry said the injured had been taken to a local hospital for treatment.

Medical staff and emergency teams have been sent by train to the scene.

The BBC's Omar Farooq in Hyderabad, the state capital, says rescue operations are being hampered because the accident site is inaccessible by road.

A minister in the state government who was among the passengers has escaped unhurt.

Railways officials said train services between Warangal and Khammam stations have been disrupted.

Many long-distance trains have been diverted or stopped and several others have been cancelled.