Almost 600 people were injured when the train, travelling from Yaounde to the economic hub of Douala, came off the rails near the central city of Eseka at around midday yesterday.
"We have received between 60 and 70 bodies at the station this morning," a railway official who asked not to be identified told AFP in Yaounde today.
The train was crammed with people because a collapsed bridge had made travelling the same route by road impossible.
Passengers' relatives thronged the city's main hospital to look for their loved ones.
At the hospital's morgue "there are 28 unidentified bodies. The identified bodies are at another morgue," said a policeman on duty there.
The first person allowed into the morgue, a woman, emerged in tears.
"She recognised the body of her sister," explained one of the people with her.
As she waited her turn to enter, another woman, Fadimatou, said, "We have had no news from our sister since yesterday. We don't know whether she is alive.
Dan Njoya said he had come to the morgue "to see if the body of my four-month-old baby is here."
Most of those injured in the accident were taken to hospitals in Douala, medical sources said.
Last evening, the transport minister said 55 people were known to have died and 575 were injured in the accident.
State-run television reported that many of the injured were in a critical condition and that the cause of the accident had not been discovered.
Also yesterday, rail operator Camrail, a subsidiary of French investment group Bollore, said it had deployed "intervention and security teams" to the site of the accident.
Police had cordoned off the railway stations in both cities today.
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