Wednesday, 16 April 2025

At least 37 dead after two buses collide

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Handout picture released by Bolivian Police shows the wreckage of a bus that collided with another one on a highway near Uyuni, Bolivia on March 1, 2025. Two passenger buses collided in the early hours of March 1, 2025, on a highway in southern Bolivia, leaving at least 37 dead, including two children, and some 30 people injured, police said. (Photo by Handout / Bolivian Police / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / Bolivian Police / HANDOUT / " - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS

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LA PAZ (Bolivia): Two passenger buses collided Saturday on a highway in southern Bolivia, leaving at least 37 people dead including eight minors, police said, in the country’s worst bus accident to date this year.

“So far we have 37 confirmed deaths,” Colonel Wilson Flores told AFP of the crash near the city of Uyuni in the department of Potosi.

Another 41 people were injured and transported to hospitals, police said.

Six foreigners were among those killed: five Peruvians and a three-year-old German girl. Seven other minors also died.

The accident occurred on a narrow two-way road early Saturday.

One of the buses was heading to the city of Oruro, the scene this weekend of the Oruro Carnival, one of the largest festivals in Latin America that attracts tens of thousands of people.

Potosi prosecutor Gonzalo Aparicio told state-run news agency ABI that the driver of one of the buses had been drinking and was speeding when he strayed into the opposing lane where he crashed into the oncoming vehicle.

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“So far it is known that a driver of one of the buses was under the influence of alcohol,” he said.

Earlier an official had said one of the drivers, who survived the crash in grave condition, had “alcohol breath”, so a blood test was performed.

Bolivia’s winding mountain roads are notoriously deadly.

Road accidents kill an average of 1,400 people every year in the country of about 12 million inhabitants, according to government data. – AFP

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