Hi,
As Salim mentioned, there may be other reasons for the accident---as the germans found out---with their high speed train a few yearsago.
Even with a welded track and an extra high quality suspension system and noise reducing options, the german riders were not satisfied with the noise level of their high speed pride, they wanted german ingenuity to come up with a quiter ride. And indeed it did.
Around the steel wheel, they mounted a rubber ring and on top of that they mounted the steel rim. There were skeptics who thought that it would never work. The german engineers made it work. Somehow it passed the german safety inspection and the wheels got mounted on the coaches.
All went well till one day, the high speed train is on its run, it is going to pass under an over head bridge, which has concrete pillars next to the rail track, the train passes a connection transition, for some reason the track shift is not complete and it stays partially open, if I am not forgetting it, the wheel got of the track, the train is still moving at a high speed, the passengers feel a slight bump, the conductor pays no attention to a customers complaint, and then suddenly the piece of broken ring proturdes the coach, the coach shakes, the wheel breaks of, the coach jerks of the track and hits the pillar post, the impact breaks it away from the locomotive, the locomotive driver does not know if the train has broken loose. As the coach hits the concrete pillars, it crumbles, the coaches behind it slam into it one after the other It is total chaos, death, destruction and mayhem.
If the wheel had broken another 50 yards further---there would not have been as much destruction and loss of life as that coach would have passed the concrete pillar.