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27 Children, Others Die In Bus Crash

  At least 30 people, including 27 children, were killed Monday in northern India’s Himachal Pradesh state when a school bus plunged off a cliff, … Continue reading 27 Children, Others Die In Bus Crash


A heavily damaged bus is pictured after a crash with a truck (unseen) on the Autobahn 3 (A3) motorway on March 31, 2018, in Waldaschaff, near Aschaffenburg in Bavaria, southern Germany. A bus driver died and several passengers were injured in a traffic accident between a Belgian coach and a truck that occurred on Friday night March 30, 2018 in Bavaria. Of the approximately 50 passengers on the coach traveling to Austria, at least 17 were injured, three seriously and had to be hospitalized, local police said. Frank Rumpenhorst / dpa / AFP
FILE COPY   Photo Credit: Frank Rumpenhorst / dpa / AFP

 

At least 30 people, including 27 children, were killed Monday in northern India’s Himachal Pradesh state when a school bus plunged off a cliff, police said.

The bus carrying young students in Himachal Pradesh state flew off a cliff near Nurpur, about 325 kilometres (200 miles) from the state capital Shimla, and crashed into a valley.

“The bus rolled into a 200 feet deep (60 meters) gorge, killing 27 schoolchildren, two teachers and the driver,” a senior local police official, Santosh Patialma, told AFP from the scene around 325 kilometres from the state capital Shimla.

Most of the students aboard were aged between 10 and 12 years and hailed from a local school, he added. Twelve had been rushed to the hospital, most in a critical condition.

Onlookers rushed to search the mangled yellow bus upturned on the valley slope for survivors.

Images from the scene showed injured children being carried away bloodied and bruised, some on stretchers and others in the arms of bystanders.

The state government has announced 500,000 rupees ($7,700) in compensation for each victim’s family.

India has some of the world’s deadliest roads.

More than 150,000 people are killed each year with most accidents blamed on poor roads, badly maintained vehicles and reckless driving.

Last month, a truck carrying a wedding party drove off a bridge in western India killing 30 people, mostly women and children.

Nine children were killed in February when a vehicle crashed into them outside their school in an apparent hit-and-run.

And thirty-two people died in late December when their bus swerved off a bridge into a riverbed in Rajasthan state.

Lives are frequently lost in India’s remote, mountainous northern reaches, where narrow hairpin turns cut paths into the steep Himalayan foothills.

Last July, a bus rolled off a cliff around 100 kilometres from Shimla, a hill resort popular with tourists, claiming 28 lives.

Just a week earlier, 16 pilgrims died in a bus crash in neighbouring Jammu and Kashmir state.

In April last year, 44 people were killed in a similar accident in Himachal Pradesh.

 

AFP