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People comforting each other outside a gym facility turned into a morgue in Monteforte Irpino on Monday after a bus plunged some 30 metres into a ravine in Italy, killing 39 people.
REUTERS
MONTEFORTE IRPINO: Thirty-nine people were killed and around 10 injured when a bus plunged off a viaduct in southern Italy in what Prime Minister Enrico Letta described today as a huge tragedy.
Initial reports suggested that the coach was travelling at speed and had hit four or five cars before crashing over the roadside
barriers on a stretch of road near Monteforte Irpino, east of Naples, yesterday night. There were around 50 people on board, including many children.Initial reports suggested that the coach was travelling at speed and had hit four or five cars before crashing over the roadside
It was one of the worst road accidents in Italy’s history, and the second transport disaster to hit southern Europe in the space of five days. Seventy-nine people were killed when a high-speed train derailed in the Spanish pilgrimage town of Santiago de Compostela on Wednesday.
“It is a very sad day for Italy, what happened last night. There are no words for it,” Letta told reporters. “It is a huge tragedy.”
A statement from motorway operator Autostrade per l’Italia said the coach appeared to have been travelling fast in the vicinity of slower-moving traffic, even though the lower speed had been clearly indicated. “You would think that the barriers on the viaducts and bridges should prevent this type of accident but evidently it seems the impact was so strong that even the barrier gave way,” said Alessio Barbarulo, head of the local fire brigade division that coordinated the rescue effort.
As rescue services worked, crushed wreckage from the coach lay on its side, while bodies covered in white sheets were lined up on the road before being taken away by ambulances.
Thirty-six people were killed immediately and another three died later in hospital, a police official said.
Infrastructure Minister Maurizio Lupi said it was too early to say what may have caused the accident but that there was no indication of technical problems with the bus, which had passed its annual inspection in March.
An official from the prosecutor’s office in nearby Avellino said investigations would look at the possibility of manslaughter or causing an accident. The driver was killed in the crash. All of the victims appear to have been Italians returning from an excursion to the town of Telese Terme, known for its hot sulphurous springs and a nearby lake popular as a fishing spot. Local media said the stretch of road where the bus crashed had been the scene of repeated accidents.
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