India road crash kills 18 Hindu pilgrims

The pilgrims were carrying holy water from the Ganges to offer to the Hindu god of destruction Lord Shiv. (AFP)
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Updated 29 July 2025
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India road crash kills 18 Hindu pilgrims

  • At least 18 people were killed in eastern India on Tuesday after a bus ferrying Hindu pilgrims collided with a truck loaded with cooking gas cylinders, officials said

NEW DELHI: At least 18 people were killed in eastern India on Tuesday after a bus ferrying Hindu pilgrims collided with a truck loaded with cooking gas cylinders, officials said.

Visuals from the site in Jharkhand state showed the mangled wreckage of the bus, with its rear portion almost entirely burnt.

Local lawmaker Nishikant Dubey said the pilgrims were traveling to a Hindu shrine to celebrate the sacred month of Shravan, coinciding with the onset of the monsoons in the subcontinent.

“18 devotees lost their lives due to a bus and truck accident,” Dubey said on social media.

The pilgrims were carrying holy water from the Ganges to offer to the Hindu god of destruction Lord Shiva.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed his “deepest condolences to the families of the devotees who lost their lives.”

“The road accident in Jharkhand’s Deoghar is extremely tragic,” his office said on social media.

Tens of thousands of people die in road accidents in India every year, according to official data.

More than 172,000 died in road crashes in 2023, transport minister Nitin Gadkari told parliament.

Last November, a bus plunged into a deep Himalayan ravine in the northern state of Uttarakhand, killing at least 36 passengers and injuring several others.


UN to approve sanction exemptions on North Korea aid projects: sources

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UN to approve sanction exemptions on North Korea aid projects: sources

SEOUL: The UN Security Council sanctions committee on North Korea is to give exemptions for humanitarian aid projects in the impoverished country, diplomatic sources in Seoul told AFP on Friday.
The nuclear-armed country is under multiple sets of sanctions over its weapons programs and has long struggled with its moribund state-managed economy and chronic food shortages.
The 17 humanitarian assistance projects are all being implemented by major international organizations such as UNICEF, or by NGOs from South Korea and the United States, the sources said.
Analysts say the move would allow those groups to provide humanitarian aid, such as nutritional supplements, medical equipment and water purification systems, to North Korea.
A foreign ministry official said Seoul has made “various efforts” to ensure that humanitarian aid reaches the North, regardless of politics.
“We hope that North Korea will respond positively to our government’s efforts for peaceful coexistence on the Korean Peninsula,” the official said.
The sources spoke hours after a senior South Korean official said “new progress” on North Korea could come within days.
The foreign ministry official’s comments came while discussing US President Donald Trump’s scheduled trip to China in April.
Trump made repeated overtures to Pyongyang’s leader Kim Jong Un during a barnstorming tour of Asia last year, saying he was “100 percent” open to a meeting.
He even bucked decades of US policy by conceding that North Korea was “sort of a nuclear power.”
North Korea did not respond to Trump’s offer, and has repeatedly said it will never give up its nuclear weapons.
Trump met North Korea’s Kim three times during his first term, once famously declaring that they were “in love,” in an effort to reach a denuclearization deal.

- Landmark congress -

However, a planned summit in Hanoi in 2019 fell through over differences about what Pyongyang would get in return for giving up its nuclear weapons, and no progress has been made between the two countries since then.
Seoul and Washington reaffirmed their commitment this week to North Korea’s “complete denuclearization” and cooperation on Seoul’s nuclear-powered submarine plan, a move that has previously drawn an angry response from the North.
Pyongyang has also drawn much closer to Moscow, with its deployment of troops to aid Russia’s war against Ukraine.
It has sent thousands of troops to fight for Moscow and analysts say Russia is giving North Korea military technology, food and energy supplies in return, allowing it to sidestep tough international sanctions.
North Korea is set to hold a landmark congress of its ruling party soon, its first in five years.
Kim ordered the “expansion” and modernization of the North’s missile production ahead of the gathering.