18 dead as Egypt school bus collides with tanker

Updated 05 November 2014
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18 dead as Egypt school bus collides with tanker

CAIRO: At least 18 people were killed when a bus packed with high school students collided with three other vehicles, including a tanker truck, in northern Egypt on Wednesday, medics said.
The crash, near the Nile Delta city of Damanhur, 160 km north of Cairo, also injured 18 people, some of them seriously, police and hospital officials said.
Medics were not immediately able to say how many of the dead were children because the bodies were so badly burned after the vehicles burst into flames.
The fire completely gutted the bus which had been transporting the teenagers to school. Scorched text books were scattered near the wreckage, shown in footage aired by Egyptian television.
Medics said three charred bodies, including that of a police officer, were pulled out of a sedan which was also involved in the crash. Provincial governor Mustafa Hadhud told Egyptian television that the bus had skidded after torrential rains struck the region.
One of the pupils who survived the crash said that the bus had arrived late and that the driver had explained “there had been a problem” with the vehicle.
“I was sitting in the back of the bus when the accident happened, and I jumped out of a window,” the child told the private Egyptian CBC Extra in a telephone call from hospital.
On Sunday, 11 female university students were killed in a collision in the south of Egypt.
Road accidents are responsible for an average of nearly 12,000 deaths a year in Egypt, according to the World Health Organization.


‘Where can we go?’: Israel strikes Gaza tent camp

Updated 58 min 2 sec ago
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‘Where can we go?’: Israel strikes Gaza tent camp

  • Anssar camp was struck three times Wednesday evening, witnesses say

Shortly after ending their daily fast for Ramadan, displaced Palestinians sheltering west of Gaza City said they received phone calls from apparent Israeli military personnel ordering them to get out of the area within five minutes.
“They called us and told us to evacuate. We cannot breathe. And now they set our tents on fire. Where can we go?” said Ibtessal al-Shanbary, who escaped with a backpack and whatever small belongings she could hastily grab from her tent.


Anssar camp was struck three times Wednesday evening, witnesses said; the first two were warning strikes, and the last one was a major strike that sparked a huge fire and sent plumes of smoke into the sky.
The Israeli military did not immediately respond to a request for comment.