Motor rally accident kills three spectators in France

Emergency service personnel and a French gendarme stand by the roadside near the scene where spectators were killed after being hit by a car that veered off the road during an auto rally in Saint-Just, in France’s Puy-de-Dome department, on July 26, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 26 July 2025
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Motor rally accident kills three spectators in France

  • The three killed were two brothers, aged 70 and 60, and a 44-year-old man, said prosecutors
  • Several people who witnessed the accident near the town of Ambert in central France were in shock

SAINT-JUST, France: Three spectators died in central France on Saturday after a car driven by a 22-year-old woman racer veered off the road during an auto rally, authorities said.

The driver of the modified Peugeot 208 that hit the spectators and her 51-year-old woman co-driver were taken to hospital but without life-threatening injuries, prosecutors said.

Two men died at the scene and prosecutors later announced that a third man, airlifted to hospital, succumbed to his injuries.

The three killed were two brothers, aged 70 and 60, and a 44-year-old man, according to the public prosecutor’s office, which opened an investigation.

Several people who witnessed the accident near the town of Ambert in central France were in shock, a local official told AFP.

In total, a dozen people were taken to a psychological support unit set up in the nearby village of Saint-Just.

The accident occurred around 11 am (0900 GMT) on Saturday.

“This is a tragedy for the world of racing,” said Joel Mathurin, the local prefect, or top government official for the area.

Regional prosecutor Laure Moisset said the accident was “very violent.”

In a short statement, the rally organizers said that the race was halted at 10:49 am. All spectators were asked to leave the scene and the event’s award ceremony was canceled.

Dozens of firefighters and police were dispatched to the scene.

The investigation was “in its early stages,” the prosecutor said.

The Peugeot 208 car was to be examined.

The road where the accident took place, almost a straight line according to authorities, has been closed.

Prosecutors said they would have to determine whether the spectators were in an authorized area during the rally.

“I prefer to remain cautious,” Moisset told reporters. “It is still a little too early to be precise,” she added.

Organized since 1965, the motor rally attracted 167 teams for its 32nd edition.

In the rally held last year, a race marshal died.


Turkiye orders arrest of 29 footballers in betting scandal

Updated 4 sec ago
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Turkiye orders arrest of 29 footballers in betting scandal

  • Among the players, 27 are suspected of having bet on matches involving their own teams, prosecutors said
  • One was Metehan Baltaci, who plays for reigning Turkish champions Galatasaray

ISTANBUL: Istanbul prosecutors on Friday ordered the arrest of 46 people, among them 29 football players, as part of a sprawling investigation into illegal betting on Turkish matches.
Among the players, 27 are suspected of having bet on matches involving their own teams, the public prosecutor’s office said in a statement.
One was Metehan Baltaci, who plays for reigning Turkish champions Galatasaray, it said. Earlier this month, he had been suspended for nine months over the betting scandal.
The investigation has rocked Turkish football, with six referees placed in pre-trial detention on November 10, along with the president of Eyupspor, a club in Turkiye’s top Super Lig division.
Prosecutors did not identify the other 26 players suspected of bets involving their own teams, but said Mert Hakan Yandas, who plays for Fenerbahce, another major Istanbul club, had placed bets through someone else’s account.
The prosecutor’s office said police had so far detained 35 of the 46 people named in the arrest order. Five were known to be currently abroad, it said.

- Zero goal attempts -

Two club presidents were among those targeted by the order for “attempting to influence the outcome” of a match between their two third-division teams in the 2023-2024 season, the statement said.
The match had caught the attention of investigators because neither side had even made one attempt to score a goal, Turkish media reported, with several newspapers saying that was where the entire investigation began.
Six other suspects, one of them a player, are accused of conspiring to influence the result of a second-division clash between Umraniyespor and Giresunspor in December 2023.
A first-division referee, the ex-president of second-division side Adana Demirspor, and a well-known football commentator and his wife were also targeted for “suspect financial transactions” in their bank accounts.
So far, the Turkish Football Federation (TFF) — which has said it wants to “clean up” the beautiful game in Turkiye — has suspended more than 1,000 players, 25 of them from the Super Lig, with the sanctions ranging from 45 days to 12 months.
Only one was a foreign national — Konyaspor’s Senegalese winger Alassane Ndao, who was suspended for 12 months.
In October, the TFF suspended nearly 150 referees for betting on matches, all of whom have since been dismissed.