Temple-goers die in Thai bus accident
Police say at least 20 people killed as bus plunges into ravine in mountainous Lampang province.
At least 20 people have been killed and 16 injured after a bus carrying Buddhist worshippers from a temple plunged into a ravine in northern Thailand’s mountainous Lampang province, police said.
The driver, who was injured in the accident, lost control of the vehicle before it fell about 30m into the ravine on a curvy rural road in Wang Nuea district on Wednesday, police Colonel Somdet Tossaporn said.
Keep reading
list of 4 items‘Mama we’re dying’: Only able to hear her kids in Gaza in their final days
Europe pledges to boost aid to Sudan on unwelcome war anniversary
Birth, death, escape: Three women’s struggle through Sudan’s war
The travellers were coming from the temple after making merit – a Buddhist ritual of performing good deeds or other acts. Most of those killed were women.
Up to 26,000 people are killed in road accidents every year in Thailand, according to the Interior Ministry.
A recent report by the World Health Organisation said the country saw about 38.1 road deaths per 100,000 of population, compared to an average of 18.5 in Southeast Asia as a whole.