This "responsibility business" would not do, Congress chief spokesperson Randeep Surjewala said while stressing that Prabhu had to resign.
Surjewala was referring to Prabhu's tweet that he took "full moral responsibility" for the recent train accidents and indicating that he had offered to resign in a meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
He also urged the prime minister to appoint a responsible person in his place and draw a safety map for the railways.
Sending a member of the Railway Board on leave or suspending junior officers was not enough.
"The railways minister has utterly failed. We had demanded his resignation. Railways Minister Suresh Prabhu has today said, again on Twitter instead of coming forward and facing the media, that he takes responsibility."
This, he said, was not acceptable.
The Congress leader also asked the prime minister to allocate money for rail safety measures, fill up 1.42 lakh vacant posts in the railways and ensure the safety of millions of passengers.
He said 28 major train accidents, killing 259 people had injuring 973, had taken place since the Modi government took office. The death toll from derailments in 2016-17 was the highest it had been in a decade.
Stepping up the party's attack against Prabhu, Congress spokesperson Manish Tewari added that Prabhu should step down from his post if he had an "iota of morality" left in him after two derailments in five days.
"Asking" Railway Board Chairman A K Mital to step down was the "worst kind of tokenism", he added.
The government today appointed Air India Chairman and Managing Director Ashwani Lohani chairman of the Railway Board after Mital resigned from the post, officials said.
If Modi could spend Rs 1 lakh crore on a bullet train, why couldn't he allocate Rs 40,000 crore for the safety of the railways.
"We have seen platform tickets go up. We have seen passengers fare go up, but railway safety remains under a serious cloud," he said.
On August 19, 13 coaches of the Kalinga Utkal Express derailed in Khatauli, Uttar Pradesh, killing over 20 passengers and injuring over 150.
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