Dozens hospitalized after tour bus crash on Hwy. 401
Most victims were Chinese tourists, four in life-threatening state
PRESCOTT, ONT.— A bus carrying Chinese tourists crashed into a rock cut Monday in eastern Ontario, sending at least 24 people to hospital, four with lifethreatening injuries, provincial police said. Const. Suzanne Runciman said the bus was carrying about 37 people, including the driver and a tour guide, when it went off the westbound lanes of Hwy. 401 and hit the rock cut.
Runciman said the crash took place at about 2:30 p.m. between Brockville and Prescott.
“My understanding is they are tourists, there was a tour guide with them,” Runciman said.
The Chinese Embassy in Ottawa said in a tweet Monday evening it was aware of the colli- sion and “very much concerned about the conditions of the injured passengers.”
“We are contacting the Canadian side for more information,” it said.
A truck driver who passed by shortly after the crash said he could see passengers standing outside the bus holding bloody noses and some appeared to have facial injuries.
The bus was sitting in the ditch, up against some rocks, he said. A dash cam photo of the scene he shared showed at least three ambulances and first responders, with about half a dozen people standing at the side of the road.
“It definitely looked very surreal and chaotic,” said the man, who would only give his name as Robert.
Meanwhile, Ornge air ambulance spokesperson Joshua McNamara said at least one person was taken to Ottawa via air ambulance.
About 20 of the crash victims were also transported by school bus, with emergency personnel on board, to Ottawa’s Queensway-Carleton Hospital.
Dr. Bhaskar Gopalan, the hospital’s chief ER physician, said the hospital was told crash victims were on their way, but they didn’t know exactly how many. He said the hospital set up a triage centre in a garage beside the emergency department.
“Then news came that these patients only spoke Mandarin, so we put the call out to see if anyone in the hospital could help translate, and several physicians and nursing staff showed up,” he said.
The hospital said the injured were all in stable condition when they arrived and were being treated for a range of injuries that included cuts, bruises and possible broken bones.