Up to 18 people were feared dead yesterday after a tour bus carrying pensioners burst into flames following a collision with a trailer truck in southern Germany, police said.
There was “only a glimmer of hope” that some of them would be found alive outside the coach, police spokesman Juergen Stadter told news channel NTV, which showed images of the vehicle’s charred skeleton.
“Maybe someone ran away in shock,” he said, adding that 18 people were still missing, raising the figure earlier given by police.
Photo: EPA
Another police spokeswoman, Anne Hoefer, said that the passengers were “old people” and that some may not have made it out of the bus.
Some of the 30 passengers pulled out of the burning bus were seriously hurt, Stadter said.
The bus carrying 46 passengers and two drivers rammed into the trailer in a traffic jam on the motorway A9 close to the Bavarian town of Stammbach.
The crash shortly after 7am sent the bus up in flames.
According to the Bild newspaper, the coach was traveling from the eastern region of Lausitz and heading for Nuremberg.
The accident struck near the town Bayreuth, which draws thousands of classical music lovers every summer to its opera festival.
The region close to the Czech border is also dotted with spas and castles, and the A9 is a trunk motorway leading to many popular summer holiday spots.
An emergency team, including firefighters and rescue workers, were at the scene, while traffic on the motorway was halted in both directions.
Those hurt were being flown by rescue helicopters to hospitals, many with life-threatening injuries.
If those missing are confirmed killed, the accident at the start of the summer holiday season would be one of the worst to hit Germany.
Among the deadliest in recent years was a collision in June 2007, when 13 people were killed as their tour bus drove off the road and plunged several metres down a slope in eastern Germany’s Saxony-Anhalt state.
In September 1992, 21 people died when a bus swerved out of its lane and struck a truck before ramming into the road divider in the southern Black Forest region, a key tourist destination.
Across Europe, the last such fatal accident struck on Jan. 21 in Italy, when a Hungarian bus carrying 56 people bursts into flames after crashing on a highway near the northern city of Verona. Sixteen people died, mostly teenagers returning from a ski trip to France.
In France, a head-on crash in October 2015 between a truck and a bus carrying pensioners claimed 43 lives as both vehicles burst into flames.
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