The rear cars of a passenger train from Alexandria to Cairo, crowded with passengers due to the Eid al-Adha holiday, caught fire on the approach to Benha station. Many passengers jumped from the moving train rather than waiting for the station. Altogether 48 people are killed.[1]
January 30, 1954
28
Many
Run over
People awaiting the arrival of President Mohammed Naguib's train on a visit to Ibyar and Kafr El Zayat station pressed forward onto the track where a Cairo to Alexandria express was approaching; 28 were killed, including three policemen, and many injured.[2][3]
March 23, 1956
0
Hundreds
Derailment
A speeding express train of the Egyptian state railways plunged into a deep canal near Maghagha in southern Egypt, with hundreds of injuries reported.[4]
September 8, 1977
25–70
0
Derailment
As an 11-car Cairo to Aswan express passed Asyut at about 70 mph (110 km/h), eight cars derailed. Newspaper reports showed 70 people killed, but official sources listed only 25.[5]
June 10, 1983
22
46
Collision
One train crashed into the rear of another south of Cairo, and ended up with a baggage car standing vertically on its end that was crushed between the locomotive and the first passenger car. At least 22 people were killed in the accident and 46 injured.[6]
A passenger train collided with a freight train north of Cairo, killing five people and injuring 30.[7][8]
July 16, 2008
44
33
Collision
At least 44 people were killed and 33 injured when a truck failed to stop at a level crossing and pushed two vehicles into a Matruh–Alexandria passenger train, at El Dabaa, Marsa Matruh.[9]
October 24, 2009
18
0
Collision
2009 El Ayyat railway accident – A passenger train was stopped after striking a water buffalo in the El Ayyat area of Giza. Another passenger train, travelling in the same direction, later ran into the back of the stationary train, resulting in the deaths of at least 18 people.[10]
July 17, 2012
15
Derailment
A passenger train struck wooden planks and chunks of metal put down by people to cross the tracks and derailed at Giza, injuring fifteen passengers.[11]
Seven were killed and scores injured when a train crashed into a truck in Giza. Reports said the gatekeeper forgot about the coming passenger train until a truck pulled out in front of the crossing.[15]
A head-on crash between two trains killed at least 15 people and injured dozens more near Cairo.[17]
February 27, 2019
25
50
Collision
Ramses Station rail disaster: A train smashed into a barrier inside Ramses Station, causing a major explosion and a fire. More than 25 people died and at least 50 others were injured.[18]
March 26, 2021
18
200
Collision
Sohag train collision: A passenger train ran into the rear of another near Sohag. At least 18 were killed, 200 injured. The prosecutor ordered the arrest of 8 rail officials.[19][20]
April 15, 2021
0
15
Derailment
Two cars of a passenger train, from Cairo to Mansoura, derailed at Minya al-Qamh. Fifteen people were injured.[21][22]
April 18, 2021
23
139
Derailment
Toukh train accident: Four carriages of a passenger train, from Cairo to Mansoura, derailed in Toukh. 23 people were killed and 139 were injured.[23]
April 27, 2021
1
3
Collision
Train no. 115, travelling from Ismailia to Suez, crashed into a pickup truck towing a trailer and loaded with bricks at a level crossing in Suez’s Al-Amer village.[24] A technician was in detention for investigation.
March 7, 2023
2
16
Derailment
Two people were killed and 16 others injured after a passenger train crashed into a station platform in Qalyub.[25]
September 14, 2024
At least 2
At least 29
Two trains collided
At least two killed, 29 injured, when two trains collided in Zagazig.[26]
^United Press, "Train Plunges Into Deep Canal; Many Casualties", The San Bernardino Daily Sun, San Bernardino, California, Friday 23 March 1956, Volume LXII, Number 176,page 1.
Semmens, Peter (1994). Railway Disasters of the World: Principal Passenger Train Accidents of the 20th Century. Patrick Stephens Ltd. ISBN1-85260-323-2.
Haine, Edgar A. (1993). Railroad wrecks. Associated University Presses. ISBN978-0-8453-4844-4.