Toronto Star

Bus falls into ravine, kills 45

Girl, 8, sole survivor after vehicle with Easter pilgrims plunges off bridge

- GERALD IMRAY AND NQOBILE NTSHANGASE

An eight-year-old girl was the lone survivor after a bus full of pilgrims making their way to a popular Easter festival in rural South Africa slammed into a bridge on a mountain pass and plunged more than 45 metres into a ravine before bursting into flames, killing all 45 others on board.

It was a tragic reminder of how deadly South Africa’s roads become during the Easter period, when millions criss-cross the country during the long holiday weekend.

Authoritie­s repeatedly warn motorists of the danger and had issued multiple messages urging caution just a day before Thursday’s horrific crash.

The girl somehow survived after the bus carrying worshipper­s from neighbouri­ng Botswana careened off the bridge and caught fire as it hit the rocks below, according to authoritie­s.

The girl was in a stable condition in the hospital after being admitted with serious injuries and was “in safe hands,” an official with the local health department said Friday. Details of her injuries were not released.

Forensic investigat­ors retrieved what they believed were 34 of the 45 bodies, but couldn’t be certain of the exact number, reflecting the gruesome nature of the crash. Many of the victims trapped inside the bus were burned beyond recognitio­n, authoritie­s said.

Dr. Phophi Ramathuba, an official with the Limpopo provincial health department, said only nine of the bodies recovered were likely to be identifiab­le.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said the victims, who appeared to all be from Botswana, were on their way to the rustic town of Moria in Limpopo province for the Easter weekend pilgrimage that attracts hundreds of thousands of followers of the Zion Christian Church.

The church has its headquarte­rs in Moria and it was the first time the full pilgrimage was being held since the COVID-19 pandemic. Worshipper­s flocked to the small town which features a giant star — the church’s emblem — and the words “Zion City Moria” painted in white on a hillside.

Ramathuba said South African authoritie­s had asked church leaders from Botswana to come and help identify the victims.

Good Friday and Easter Monday are national holidays in South Africa and many of its neighbours, when millions travel into, out of and across the nation.

For some South Africans, it’s a chance to return to their hometowns and villages from jobs in the cities. Migrants also travel back to their home countries to see family. Some, like the pilgrims that died on Thursday, make religious trips.

Road travel can be treacherou­s; South Africa’s Road Traffic Management Corporatio­n reported that 252 people died in road crashes between Holy Thursday and Easter Monday last year.

Authoritie­s said it appeared the bus driver lost control and the vehicle slammed into the barriers along the side of the bridge and then went over the edge. The driver was among the dead.

 ?? THEMBA HADEBE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Forensic investigat­ors on Friday worked through the wreckage of a bus in a ravine a day after it fell off a bridge on the Mmamatlaka­la mountain pass between Mokopane and Marken, about 300 kilometres north of Johannesbu­rg, South Africa.
THEMBA HADEBE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Forensic investigat­ors on Friday worked through the wreckage of a bus in a ravine a day after it fell off a bridge on the Mmamatlaka­la mountain pass between Mokopane and Marken, about 300 kilometres north of Johannesbu­rg, South Africa.

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