Recently everyone is surfing the internet to know more about the Odisha train accident. Since this incident occurred, the public seems to be surfing the Internet more and more and looking for the latest news about the accident. Everyone likes to know more about the accident and what is new that is happening there. There has also been some news about Station Master Sharif Balasore who missed the news and to know more about this news, the public is checking the internet. So, here we bring the information about the missing case of the stationmaster. To know more about the accident, keep reading the article.
Is stationmaster Mohammed Sharif Balasore missing?
Approximately 250 kilometers from its final destination, the Yeshwantpur-Howrah Express sped up its approach to Bahanaga Bazar station in northeast Odisha on June 2 at 6:55 p.m. and achieved the astonishing speed of more than 125 km. Just 35 seconds later, the Coromandel Express, also leaving Howrah, sped onto the tracks near the station as it left for Chennai. False information about the stationmaster at Bahanaga Bazar station was spread through social media posts seeking to publicize a fatal train disaster that occurred in the Balasore area of Odisha.
These posts make the incorrect claim that the stationmaster, Sharif Ali Balasore, fled the scene of the accident and is a Muslim. These claims have been refuted by a fact check conducted by the reputable fact-checking organization BOOM. In response to a query from BOOM, Aditya Kumar Chaudhary, South Eastern Railway’s director of public relations, acknowledged that SB Mohanty, and not Sharif Ali, is the assistant station master at Bahanaga Bazar. Furthermore, Chaudhary refuted rumors that Mohanty fled the scene of the collision by stating that he did not. The viral tweets not only promote false information about the stationmaster, but also a false claim that a mosque existed near the crash site in the Balasore neighborhood.
The photograph uploaded in these tweets actually shows an ISKCON temple, not a mosque as claimed by several social media users. This was discovered through BOOM’s research. The posts frequently shared on Facebook use inflammatory language and try to spread unproven claims about links between Bangladesh, the Rohingya, the ISI and Manipur. These accusations, without any basis in truth, only serve to exacerbate racial tensions. In conclusion, it is false to state that the disappearance of stationmaster Sharif Ali was related to the Balasore railway tragedy.
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Source: vtt.edu.vn