52 people of Russia-bound bus die after it caught fire in Kazakhstan
Fifty-two people were killed yesterday when the Russia-bound bus they were traveling on caught fire in Kazakhstan, the central Asian nation’s emergency services ministry said.
“On January 18 at 10:30am, a bus caught fire ... 55 passengers and two drivers were on board. Five people who managed to escape are receiving medical assistance. The rest died on the spot,” the ministry said, without elaborating on the cause of the blaze.
All those who died are believed to be Uzbek nationals, an interior ministry official told Interfax-Kazakhstan news agency.
Kazakh media reported they were migrant workers traveling to Russia.
Uzbekistan’s emergency services ministry said it had opened a hotline.
The vehicle was registered in Kazakhstan, emergency services ministry official Ruslan Imankulov said.
He said the fire spread very quickly.
Regional emergency service officials initially blamed the fire on a short circuit and said the bus was overloaded, Interfax-Kazakstan news agency reported.
Ministry representative Imankulov did not confirm this however, saying: “It’s too early to talk about the reasons for the fire.”
Panic broke out on board the bus, hindering evacuation, while survivors managed to climb through a door and window, Kazakh news site BNews reported.
Two of the survivors suffered burns to their hands, emergency services officials said, while others suffered minor injuries.
The Kazakh emergency services ministry said the bus was traveling from the southern Kazakh town of Shymkent to the Russian city of Samara on the Volga river, a distance of almost 1,900 kilometers.
Video broadcasts by Russian and Kazakh media showed black smoke and flames billowing from the vehicle which had veered across a flat stretch of road carving through a snowy steppe. A photograph taken later showed the vehicle completely charred.
The Kazakh investments and development ministry said the vehicle was a 29-year-old German-built Setra bus.
The accident is one of the deadliest in the last five years, with the worst toll in Afghanistan in 2016 when two buses collided with an oil tanker, killing at least 73 people.
The tragedy, which struck in the area around the city of Aktobe, highlights the high accident rate for passenger transport in the region.
In October last year, a Kazakh-registered bus with Uzbek passengers was hit by a train in Russia after breaking down on the tracks, killing 19 aboard the bus.
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