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Central Java train crash kills four: Police

The driver of the car involved in the collision in Grobogan did not see the oncoming train on a level crossing due to thick fog, according to the police.

Agencies
Semarang
Sat, May 2, 2026 Published on May. 2, 2026 Published on 2026-05-02T02:01:59+07:00

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This handout picture taken and released on May 1, 2026 by the Grobogan Police traffic unit shows a vehicle struck by a passenger train, killing at least four people as it attempted to cross an unguarded railway crossing in Grobogan, Central Java. The driver of the car involved in the collision did not see the oncoming train on a level crossing due to thick fog, local traffic officer Eko Ari Kisworo said in a statement issued by the police. This handout picture taken and released on May 1, 2026 by the Grobogan Police traffic unit shows a vehicle struck by a passenger train, killing at least four people as it attempted to cross an unguarded railway crossing in Grobogan, Central Java. The driver of the car involved in the collision did not see the oncoming train on a level crossing due to thick fog, local traffic officer Eko Ari Kisworo said in a statement issued by the police. (AFP/Handout/Grobogan Police traffic unit)

A

train hit a car in Grobogan, Central Java on Friday, killing four people including two children, police said, days after another deadly train crash outside Jakarta.

The driver of the car involved in the collision in Grobogan did not see the oncoming train on a level crossing due to thick fog, said First Insp. Eko Ari Kisworo of the Grobogan Police traffic unit in a statement issued by the police.

The train then collided with the car, which carried nine people and was flung about 20 meters before hitting a pole and flipping into a rice field, Eko said.

Four passengers, including a two-year-old girl and another who was 10, were killed, while the driver and the remaining passengers were injured, the officer added.

The accident came just days after the Argo Bromo Anggrek intercity train slammed into the last, women-only carriage of a stationary commuter train at the Bekasi Timur Station in Bekasi, West Java on Monday, killing 16 women and injuring at least 90 people.

President Prabowo Subianto has blamed the Bekasi incident on unsafe level crossings and ordered a countrywide upgrade with guard posts or flyovers.

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Transport accidents are not uncommon in Indonesia, a vast archipelago nation where buses, trains and even planes are often old and poorly maintained.

A major train crash in January 2024 killed four crew members in West Java province. In 2015, 16 people were killed when a commuter train crashed into a minibus on a level crossing in Jakarta.

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