UPDATE: Horror Eastern Cape bus crash kills 25, 61 injured
While the exact cause of the crash was not known, the driver reportedly lost control of the bus in the bushes down a steep area.
The bus in which 25 people were killed and about 60 injured when it rolled down a steep incline near Centane in the Eastern Cape, 2 March 2020. Photo: Eastern Cape Health department
At least 25 people were killed in a bus accident in the Eastern Cape on Monday, the Road Traffic Management Corporation (RTMC) has said. Sixty-one people were injured.
The bus was travelling on a gravel road near the Tafalofefe Hospital on Monday morning around 8am when it overturned, said RTMC spokesperson Simon Zwane.
“The Marcopolo bus was travelling from Chebe, picking passengers at locations along the road to Butterworth,” he said.
While the exact cause of the crash was not known, Zwane said the driver reportedly lost control of the bus in the bushes down a steep area.
The final number of casualties has yet to be confirmed.
Eastern Cape bus acci claims at least 10 lives mostly pensioners on their way to do monthly shopping. Photo EC Health Dept #sabcnews #busacci pic.twitter.com/2yArPPPbPW
— janine lee (@JanineCLee) March 2, 2020
Eastern Cape department of health spokesperson Sizwe Kupelo said they had dispatched two helicopters and ambulances after hearing about the accident between Mazeppa Bay and Cebe.
“Because of the terrain where the accident happened, our helicopters cannot land. Our ambulances are on the ground while others are on their way to the scene of the accident.”
First responders reported spotting at least 10 bodies which appeared to have been thrown from the bus when it rolled.
VIDEO | Eastern Cape bus accident which claimed the lives of 10 people, mostly pensioners. Video courtesy EC Health Department #sabcnews pic.twitter.com/Mgjq1Uph7k
— SABC News (@SABCNews) March 2, 2020
“We have instructed hospitals in Mthatha and East London to keep beds unoccupied in anticipation that those who might be injured will be transferred there. As soon as the search and rescue mission has been completed, we will keep people informed as to where they should go to see their loved ones.”
The first passenger to be airlifted to East London was a critically injured three-year-old boy.
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