"Loud Bang, Then Bus Rolled Off Hill": Student Recounts Himachal Horror

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Kangra school bus accident: The children were students of Wazir Ram Singh Pathania Memorial School
A school bus veered off a mountain road in Kangra Valley on
Monday, tumbling into a deep gorge in the Himalayan foothills and killing at least 27 people, including 23 children.Local officials fear the
death toll will rise in what many consider the worst school bus accident in the region in recent years
The children, students of Wazir Ram Singh Pathania Memorial School in Himachal Pradesh, were between 5 and 11 years of age, according to the
Hindustan Times, though other reports say some were as young as 4 and as old as 14.Kangra officials described a horrific scene in the
moments after the crash, which occurred about 300 miles north of New Delhi.Villagers acted as first responders, rushing to the scene the
moment they heard the bus smash into the rocky gorge, local officials told the Times
Blood drenched the villagers' shirts as they carried the deceased children's bodies in their arms."We had to cut open the body of the bus to
pull out the victims and survivors," Santosh Patial, Kangra's police chief, told the newspaper.Ranveer Singh, 10, was thrown through a
window, he told the Hindustan Times."I heard a loud bang and bus starting rolling down the hill
Just then the window near my seat broke and I and a girl sitting by my side fell out," he said.Rakesh Pathania, a local politician, told The
New York Times that 12 children were in the hospital, with one in critical condition.An investigation is underway into the cause of the
accident, BBC News reported.Suraksha Devi told the BBC that four of her grandchildren were killed in the crash."All I have left are
photographs of them now," she said.Bus accidents are common in India, especially in the hills, where poor infrastructure, deep potholes and
early 2017, at least 15 children were killed and 45 others injured after their school bus collided with a truck in Uttar Pradesh.India has
some of the deadliest roads in the world, with more than 200,000 traffic fatalities each year, according to 2013 data from the World Health
Organization
The Supreme Court has called India's roads "giant killers." Experts have told The Washington Post that many of those accused in accidents go
free because of weak and outdated motor vehicle regulations, routine corruption, lagging investigations and slow court trials.The Wazir Ram
Singh Pathania private school's bus left campus around 3 pm Monday
It had barely been driven four miles when the driver, Madan Lal, lost control of the bus, according to the Times of India
The bus fell at least 200 feet, according to local reports.Local officials told the Times of India that they are still investigating the
cause.By Monday night, the search for survivors had ended, according to The Associated Press
The bodies of those deceased lay covered in sheets on the floor of the Nurpur mortuary."I am deeply anguished by the loss of lives," Prime
Minister Narendra Modi said in a tweet
"My prayers and solidarity with those who lost their near and dear ones in the accident."