At least 37 people were killed and seven injured when a speeding Mumbai-bound private bus plunged into the Jagbudi River in Ratnagiri district on Tuesday. |
A packed passenger bus
plunged off a bridge into a river in western India Friday killing at least 37
people, an official said, in one of the deadliest road accidents in recent
years.
AFP
report continues:
The
incident happened when the driver lost control and veered off the road into
Purna river in Navsari district, some 285 kilometres (180 miles) from
Ahmedabad, the main city of Gujarat state.
"The
death toll has risen to 37. At least 24 others are admitted to hospital for
treatment," senior administrative official Remya Mohan in Navsari told
AFP.
Television
images showed locals and rescuers in the water, using their bare hands to carry
people to ambulances in bedsheets and remove parts of the mangled bus wreckage.
The
Gujarat government announced 400,000 rupees (US$5,900) in compensation for the
families of those killed.
India
has some of the world's deadliest roads, with more than 230,000 fatalities
annually, according to the World Health Organization ©Chandan Khanna (AFP)
|
Fatal
traffic accidents are common in India, which has some of the world's deadliest
roads.
In
October, 15 members of a wedding party, including three children, were killed
when a vehicle they were travelling in collided with a bus in southern India.
In
2013, a speeding bus exploded in a ball of flames after crashing into the
central reservation of a southern Indian highway, killing 45 passengers as they
slept.
The
number of deaths on Indian roads -- more than 231,000 every year, according to
a World Health Organization in 2013 -- is disproportionately high.
India
owns only one percent of global vehicles but accounts for 15 percent of traffic
deaths around the world, according to the World Bank.
Campaigners
say commercial drivers are largely unregulated, meaning many work long hours
overnight which raises the danger of falling asleep at the wheel.
Transport
analysts attribute the huge number of accidents to poor roads, badly maintained
vehicles and reckless driving.
The government has put
forward proposals for new legislation to make roads safer by stiffening lax
traffic regulations.
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