SRI LANKA - A passenger train derailed after striking a herd of elephants near a wildlife reserve in central Sri Lanka, in the early hours of Thursday.
While no injuries were reported among passengers, six elephants died from the accident in Habarana, east of the capital Colombo.
Two injured elephants were being treated, police said, noting that it was the worst such wildlife accident the country had seen, AFP reported. It is not uncommon for trains to run into herds of elephants in Sri Lanka, where casualties on both sides of human-elephant encounters are among the highest in the world. Last year, more than 170 people and nearly 500 elephants were killed in human-elephant encounters overall - and around 20 elephants are killed by trains annually, according to local media. Elephants, whose natural habitats are affected by deforestation and shrinking resources, have increasingly strayed into places of human activity.