Christmas eve bus carnage in Ecuador, 41 dead
QUITO — A coach journey by passengers heading home for family Christmas celebrations in Ecuador turned tragic when the overcrowded vehicle plunged off the road, killing at least 41, officials said.
Seven children were among the dead, a spokesman for the Ecuadoran Red Cross, Fernando Gandarillas, told AFP.
Rescue officials said around 30 passengers survived, but were injured, some of them badly.
"There's been a very serious accident with approximately 41 people killed," National Transport Council (CNT) director Ricardo Anton told reporters. Earlier reports put the death toll at 35.
Gandarillas said the bus had been traveling from the capital Quito to the eastern towns of Chone and San Isidro, a trip of more than 250 kilometers (180 miles), when it fell into a ravine as it negotiated a descent.
A police chief from a nearby town of El Carmen, Diego Iniguez, told media the bus had been filled over capacity and appeared to have experienced a gearbox problem before the driver lost control.
The national emergency service said the dead included seven children and 13 women. At least 31 other passengers were hurt.
President Rafael Correa regretted the loss of life.
"It's a well-designed highway," he told a Christmas meeting with his staff, adding that the accident was due to "the irresponsibility of the driver who crashed with more than 70 passengers" on board.
"He picked up passengers along the road, which is prohibited," Correa added.
One survivor told television station Ecuavisa that, just before the accident, a woman at the front of the bus started screaming that the driver "can't shift gears."
He said the driver appeared to attempt to keep control of the vehicle, but failed and the bus rolled over for some 200 meters (yards) before hitting a tree then dropping into the ravine.
Another survivor, Juan Pablo Alcivar, told Radio Quito how the bus's gears were heard grinding as the driver tried to downshift.
The police traffic accident service said it was at the scene of the carnage to try to determine what went wrong.
The injured were taken to several hospitals in the area, while the bodies were piled up inside police vans and delivered to morgues.
The bus belonged to the east Ecuadoran coach company Reina del Camino, which the CNT director said has been shut down temporarily.
"There was a terrible mistake made in this accident," Anton told reporters, adding that he was asking police for "the reason the bus was allowed to leave with too many passengers."
The accident occurred on a busy day on the South American nation's roads, as thousands of Ecuadorans streamed back to home towns to share in family Christmas gatherings.
The country has a poor road safety record, and Ecuadorans are known for their aggressive driving habits.
Attorney General Washington Pesantez said there was a traffic fatality on average every three hours, generating 500 million dollars in costs to society every year.
In August a coach fell into a 100-meter (330-foot) ravine in southern Ecuador, killing 38 people and injuring 12.
Road accidents were the second-biggest cause of death in the country of 13 million people.
The government, which has been pushing a driver awareness campaign, says 3,000 fatalities were recorded this year to November, in 43,000 reported accidents.
No comments:
Post a Comment