Tunisian bus plunges off cliff, killing at least 24

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AIN SNOUSSI, Tunisia, Dec 2, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – At least 24 Tunisians were
killed and 18 more injured when a bus plunged into a ravine on Sunday, in one
of the country’s worst road accidents.

The bus had set off from Tunis to the picturesque northern mountain town of
Ain Draham, a popular autumn destination for Tunisians near the Algerian
border, the tourism ministry said.

Twenty-four people were killed and 18 injured, the victims aged between 20
and 30, said the health ministry.

An AFP team that went to the scene saw the mangled remains of the bus
leaning on its side in the ravine near a river bed, with its seats scattered
around the crash site.

The top of the bus appears to have been torn off and bodies, some in sports
clothes and trainers, were strewn across the ground.

A sign reading in English “Sweet Time Travel” — apparently the name of the
travel agency that ferried the tourists from Tunis — lay among the debris.

The bus with 43 people on board was travelling through the northern Ain
Snoussi region when it veered off the road, the interior ministry said.

The vehicle had “fallen into a ravine after crashing through an iron
barrier”, it said on its Facebook page.

The injured were transferred to nearby hospitals, it added.

Forensic experts were deployed to investigate the crash, AFP correspondents
said.

It was not immediately clear what caused the accident, but Tunisian roads
are known to be dangerous and run-down.

– ‘Roads of death’ –

Tourism Minister Rene Trabelsi told a private radio station Mosaique FM
that the “unfortunate accident took place in a difficult area” and just after
the bus had taken a “sharp bend”.

A civil defence official, speaking on state television, said there had
previously been deadly accidents at the same spot.

Khaled Ayadi, who had arrived at the scene after the accident, told AFP he
saw the bodies of “people scattered (all around) and blood”.

He said that he and other motorists who had stopped by the side of the road
started to help and try to retrieve the bodies until the rescuers arrived and
took over the gruesome task.

“On this road there are always accidents, especially trucks… We must find
a solution for this road so there are no more accidents,” Ayadi said, adding
that Sunday’s accident was overwhelming.

Social network users bemoaned the tragedy. “What a heavy toll,” one of them
said.

Another denounced the “roads of death” in Tunisia and wrote: “24 dead and
no one from the government has declared a national catastrophe”.

The World Health Organization in 2015 said Tunisia had the second worst
traffic death rate per capita in North Africa, behind only war-torn Libya.

Experts blamed run-down roads, reckless driving and poor vehicle
maintenance for a rise in accidents the following year.

Tunisian President Kais Saied and Prime Minister Youssef Chahed visited the
scene of Sunday’s accident, one of Tunisia’s worst.

In April, seven women day labourers were among 12 people killed when the
pickup truck taking them to work collided with a minivan in the impoverished
central region of Sidi Bouzid.

In August 2016, at least 16 people were killed and 85 others wounded in
another road accident in the mountainous region of Kasserine.

The authorities recognise the scale of the problem but have said the
country’s security challenges, including jihadist attacks, have kept them
from giving it more attention.