Bus inferno kills 16 in India

May 20, 2012

Talat Zaki Hafiz



LUCKNOW, India — Some 16 people died when a bus carrying Muslims exploded in a ball of fire after colliding head-on with a truck in northern India, officials said on Saturday.

The bus, which was en route to Ajmer Sharif, slammed into a truck parked on a road near Bahraich town, 105 kilometers from the Uttar Pradesh state capital Lucknow Friday, district officials said.

“Sixteen people died in the blaze that followed the impact of the collision between the bus and the truck,” Bahraich district magistrate Kinjal Singh said.

Two of the dead were babies while 19 other people were injured in the crash.

The bus erupted in flames after it crashed, leading to police to suspect that cooking gas cylinders carried by the passengers were to blame for the explosion.

“Many bodies were completely charred. We recovered 14 bodies and the remains of two infants from under the debris of the completely charred bus,” Singh said.

Witnesses told India’s NDTV news channel that the flames made it impossible for the bus passengers to escape.

Rescuers worked through the night using gas cutting torches to reach victims in the blackened, twisted metal wreck.

India has the highest annual road death toll in the world, according to the World Health Organization, with accidents caused by speeding, careless driving and poor roads.

About 126,000 people, or 345 a day, died on the country’s roads in 2010, the latest statistics released by the National Crime Records Bureau show. — AFP


May 20, 2012
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