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Fire guts bus carrying young people in Bulgaria, killing at least 45, many of them minors

WorldView: Deadly Bulgaria bus crash
WorldView: At least 45 dead in Bulgaria bus crash 03:57

Sofia — At least 45 people, including a dozen minors, were killed after a bus caught fire south of the Bulgarian capital early Tuesday, officials said. A cause has yet to be determined but officials believe a fire broke out on board and the bus crashed into guardrails.

There were no other vehicles involved in the accident, which occurred around 2:00 am (0000 GMT) on a highway about 26 miles from Sofia, near the village of Bosnek.

"Of the victims... 12 in total were under the age of 18," national police chief Stanimir Stanev said. He told bTV television that 45 of the 52 people on the bus were killed.

"The driver died immediately so there was no one able to open the doors," he added.

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Officials work at the site of a bus accident, in which at least 45 people were killed, on a highway near the village of Bosnek, south of Sofia, Bulgaria, November 23, 2021. DIMITAR KYOSEMARLIEV/AFP/Getty

North Macedonian Health Minister Venko Filipce told public BNT television that the seven survivors included a 16-year-old girl. All seven — two women and five men — are from the same family, he said after visiting the survivors in the Sofia hospital where they were being treated for serious burns.

Survivors "jumped out of the windows," said Maya Arguirova, head of the treatment center for severe burns where they were transported.

Images showed the carcass of the totally burned out bus, having broken through the guardrails between the two sides of the highway.

According to bTV, the bus was travelling from Turkey's main city of Istanbul to Skopje in North Macedonia. Local media in Macedonia report that the bus was registered to the "Besa trans" tourist agency, which organizes touristic and shopping tours to Istanbul.

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Officials work at the site of a bus accident, in which at least 45 people were killed, on a highway near the village of Bosnek, south of Sofia, Bulgaria, November 23, 2021. DIMITAR KYOSEMARLIEV/AFP/Getty

North Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev told state news agency MIA that he had spoken to one survivor.

"He explained that they were sleeping in the bus when an explosion was heard. They succeeded to brake one of the windows and save few people. Unfortunately, the rest did not succeed," he said.

"It is great tragedy... 12 (victims) are under 18 years old, and the rest are young people about 20 to 30 years old. Most of them are our citizens, but there are (some) from Serbia too," he added.

But police chief Stanev said while the two drivers of the bus were Macedonian, the passengers were Albanian.

"Initial information shows that 52 people were travelling in the bus, including two drivers with Macedonian nationality and 50 passengers with Albanian nationality," he said.

Bulgaria's interim Prime Minister Stefan Yanev and Interior Minister Boyko Rashkov rushed to the site of the crash Tuesday morning, while local media said that the North Macedonian and Albanian premiers were also on their way.

"It's a terrifying picture in there. I haven't seen anything like that before," Rashkov told journalists at the site.

"Nobody can say for certain how many are there and who they were. The bodies are badly burned and have to be identified one by one," he added.

Bulgaria has a history of deadly bus accidents. Seventeen Bulgarian tourists died in 2018 when their bus skidded on a wet road and overturned.

A total of 628 people died in road accidents in 2019 and 463 in 2020 in the country of 6.9 million people, according to official data. The accidents were often attributed to poor road conditions, outdated cars and speeding.

Tuesday's accident happened on a section of highway with steep gradients and without clear demarcation lines, where many accidents have taken place, according to Diana Roussinova of a road safety NGO, which has complained to authorities about the stretch in the past.

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