It has been nine years since the accident on the high-speed tour bus that killed seven passengers on the Kan-Etsu Expressway in Gunma Prefecture, and the bereaved families visited the site early in the morning at the time of the accident to mourn the victims. I did.

In the early morning of April 29, 2012, on the Kan-Etsu Expressway in Fujioka City, Gunma Prefecture, a high-speed tour bus heading from Ishikawa Prefecture to Chiba Prefecture collided with a wall on the side of the road, killing 7 passengers and injuring 38 people. I did.



On the 29th, nine years after the accident, 15 people, including bereaved families, visited near the site of the accident.



Then, at 4:40 am, the time when the accident occurred, he turned the flowers to the flower stand and put his hands together to mourn the victims.



Toshiki Yamase (28), who lost his mother Naomi (44 at the time) in an accident, became a police officer in Gunma prefecture six years ago, and is currently working on traffic violation control and traffic safety as a member of the White Buyer. ..



Mr. Yamase said, "I told you that I have grown so much because I have a new family. At first, it was a difficult place to go, but now it is a starting point that reminds me of why I became a police officer. It is a place where you can meet the bereaved family and gain courage and strength again. "

A woman who lost her daughter "I might have been a mom if I was alive"

A woman who lost her 19-year-old daughter in an accident and visited from Takaoka City, Toyama Prefecture, said, "I told you I'm fine. If my daughter was alive, I might have been a mom. I was sad that I couldn't do it and wanted to see it. "