Dayton Daily News

8 Americans among 12 killed in Mexico crash

- By Patrick J. McDonnell and Cecilia Sanchez

Eight U.S. MEXICO CITY — citizens were among the 12 people killed when a bus full of tourists from two cruise ships crashed en route to an archaeolog­ical site in Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula, authoritie­s confirmed Wednesday.

The fatal toll in Tuesday’s crash also included two Swedish nationals and a Canadian, according to offi- cials in Mexico’s southern Quintana Roo state, where the accident occurred.

Also killed was a Mexican tour guide on board the bus, which veered off the high- way and flipped over into the brush at about 10 a.m. Tuesday. The bus was headed to Mayan ruins at Chaccho- ben, authoritie­s said.

Officials were not imme- diately releasing the identities of the casualties. A South Florida grandmothe­r was among those killed, according to reports in Florida media.

The list of dead included o ne m ale minor, wh o se nationalit­y was not disclosed.

Of the 12 fatalities, author- ities said, 11 died at the scene and the other at a nearby hospital. Photos from the scene after the accident showed what appeared to be at least one body lying on the road.

A total of 13 passengers in the ill-fated bus remained hospitaliz­ed on Wednesday, including four U.S. citizens, four Brazilians, three Canadians and two Swedish nationals, according to Mexican officials. All were described as being “stable.”

The bus was transporti­ng 31 people, including the driver, to the ruins from the port of Mahahual, 44 miles to the southeast, officials said.

Authoritie­s provided no explanatio­n as to why the vehicle drifted off the twolane highway.

The driver suffered unspecifie­d injuries and was being detained as investi- gators opened a criminal inquiry into the incident, officials said.

Miami-based Royal Carib- bean Cruises said 27 passengers from two of its ships, Celebrity Equinox and Serenade of the Seas, were on board t he bus. Both ships were reportedly on seven-night Caribbean cruises, with a stop at Mexico’s so-called Mayan Coast.

Many cruise passengers docking in the Yucatan take daylong bus excursions to ruins and other sites on the peninsula.

Diplomats from the U.S. embassy and other foreign missions worked Wednesday to identify the dead and wounded and provide aid.

“We have staff on the scene and at local hospitals to assist victims and loved ones,” the U.S. embassy in Mexico said in a statement.

In a Twi t ter message, Roberta Jacobson, the U.S. ambassador to Mexico, expressed “our deepest con- dolences to those who lost loved ones or were injured in the horrible bus accident in Quintana Roo yesterday.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY NOVEDADES DE QUINTANA ROO ?? An ambulance parks next to an overturned bus Tuesday in Mahahual, Quintana Roo state, Mexico. The bus was carrying cruise ship passengers to Mayan ruins when it flipped over on a highway early Tuesday.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY NOVEDADES DE QUINTANA ROO An ambulance parks next to an overturned bus Tuesday in Mahahual, Quintana Roo state, Mexico. The bus was carrying cruise ship passengers to Mayan ruins when it flipped over on a highway early Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States