Rescuers finished pulling 51 bodies from the wreckage of a bus that tumbled over a cliff in Peru in one of the deadliest vehicle accidents in the nation's history, authorities have said.
Nearly everyone on board was killed Tuesday after the passenger bus collided with a tractor trailer on a narrow stretch of highway known as the "Devil's Curve."
Firefighters and police worked for more than 24 hours to recover the remains, tying bodies onto stretchers and pulling them up the cliff with ropes. The bus landed on a rocky, isolated beach north of Lima with no road access.
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"The patient is totally stable with just some cuts and a fracture to his arm," Dr Victor Viru, director of the Chancay Hospital, told a local television station yesterday.
The crash's death toll is equal to that of a 2013 accident that is the deadliest in recent Peruvian history. In that crash, 51 Quechua Indians were killed when the makeshift bus they were travelling in fell off a cliff and into a river.
Deadly wrecks with large numbers of victims occur with relative frequency along Peru's roadways, with more than 2,600 people killed in 2016.
The crashes often involve buses carrying mostly poor Peruvians travelling outside major cities. Transportation experts blame a combination of bad road conditions and little enforcement of traffic safety regulations.
President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski announced yesterday that he was ordering the nation's Ministry of Transportation to begin working on plans to expand a nearby road farther from the cliff so buses no longer have to use the "Devil's Curve."
The road near the Pacific contains 52 curves in a stretch of just 22 kilometres (14 miles) bordered by a low wall just 50 centimeters (20 inches) high. It is frequently covered in mist and has been the site of numerous accidents.
In a statement issued through the Roman Catholic Church in Peru, Pope Francis offered his condolences and prayers for "the eternal rest of the victims." The pope is scheduled to visit Peru later this month.
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