At least 43 people, most of them elderly, were killed when a coach collided with a truckand caught fire in southwest France on Friday in the country's worst road accident for three decades, officials said.
Many of the victims were thought to have died in the fire, while the driver of both the truck and the coach was also killed, according to fire officials and local authorities in the department of Gironde.
Images shown on French television showed the coach as a charred shell that had been entirely burned.
“I saw a cloud of smoke,” said local resident Yvette Seguy on France's i-Tele TV station, adding that it took place in the countryside on a bend that is known to be dangerous.
The two vehicles collided head-on near the village of Puisseguin north of Bordeaux.
The crash is the deadliest in France since 1982.
“The French government has fully mobilized after this terrible tragedy,” President Francois Hollande said from Athens, where he is on an official visit.
“We are plunged into sadness due to this drama,” he added.
Five passengers managed to escape from the coach, which had caught fire. Three others were unharmed, local authorities said.
Several emergency vehicles were dispatched to the scene.
Prime Minister Manuel Valls, Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve and Transport Minister Alain Vidalies were also on their way to the site, according to the transport ministry.
It had not been ruled out that Hollande might cut short his visit to Greece to visit the crash site.
Valls expressed his “emotion in the face of this very heavy toll” on Twitter, and promised his “support to the families of the victims.”
The coach, which was carrying 49 passengers and a driver, had departed early Friday from a village near the site of the accident to take its elderly passengers out on an excursion.
Pierre Henri-Brandet, spokesman for the interior ministry, told BFMTV that four people “were extremely severely injured” — two with burns and two with head injuries.
“It's an incredible tragedy with an extremely heavy toll. It's a catastrophe,” he said.
“They were retired people, elderly people, who were going on a day out,” he added.
Henri-Brandet added that the accident happened just a few minutes after the bus left from the village of Petit-Palais-Cornemps.
The group were part of a club for retired people and were heading south to the nearby region of Landes for a visit.
A statement from the French presidency said the truck was carrying wood.
In August 1982, 53 people including 44 children were killed in a motorway pile-up in the Cote D'Or region of eastern France.
Agence France-Presse
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