Muscat Daily

18 people killed in Thailand bus-train collision

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Chachoengs­ao, Thailand - At least 18 people were killed and more than 40 injured in Thailand on Sunday when a freight train crashed into a bus taking passengers to a religious ceremony, officials said.

The morning collision, around 50km east of the capital Bangkok, toppled the bus on its side and sheared off part of its roof.

Dozens of injured passengers were rushed to nearby medical facilities for treatment, said provincial hospital director Sombat Chutimanuk­ul.

“Four are in critical condition and eight remain under observatio­n [out of the 23 admitted to her hospital],” she told reporters.

State Railway of Thailand governor Nirut Maneephan confirmed the death toll at the site of the crash to reporters.

Footage shared by a government department showed the bus edging from the road onto

Investigat­ors work by the wreckage of an overturned bus involved in a deadly collision with a train next to Khlong Kwaeng Klan railway station in Chachoengs­ao province, east of Bangkok, on Sunday

train tracks before a blue cargo train slammed into its side.

Early photos taken by rescue workers showed gnarled metal and debris, with bodies lying by the tracks and people's belongings scattered around the scene.

Rescue workers lifted the in

jured on stretchers into nearby parked ambulances, and a crane arrived early in the afternoon to lift the vehicle off the tracks so that police could better assess the carnage.

There were some 60 passengers in the chartered bus travel

ling from neighbouri­ng Samut Prakan province to a temple in Chachoengs­ao, said province governor Maitree Tritilanon­d.

They were planning to offer yellow robes to monks - a traditiona­l ceremony held within a month of the end of Buddhist

Lent, he told reporters.

Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-O-Cha gave his condolence­s and instructed authoritie­s to investigat­e the cause of the crash, a government spokesman said in a statement.

Such deadly accidents are common in Thailand, which regularly tops lists of the world’s most lethal roads, with speeding, drunk driving and weak law enforcemen­t all contributi­ng factors. Thailand has the second-highest traffic fatality rate in the world, according to a 2018 World Health Organizati­on (WHO) report.

Though a majority of the victims are motorcycli­sts, bus crashes involving groups of tourists and migrant labourers often grab headlines. In March 2018, at least 18 people were killed and dozens wounded when a bus swerved off the road and smashed into a tree.

 ?? (AFP) ??
(AFP)

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