Black Sunday in Pakistan.

Two accidents mourned the country a few hours apart, Sunday January 29: the accident of a bus which killed at least 41 people, then the sinking of a boat which claimed the lives of at least ten children.

A rescue operation was underway on Sunday at Tandam Lake in Pakistan's northwest Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province after a ship carrying 25 to 30 students on a school trip capsized, AFP told AFP. police officer Mir Rauf.

Ten children aged 7 to 14 were found dead and eleven others were rescued, six of them in serious condition, the policeman added, adding that up to nine others were still missing. 

Earlier, at least 41 people died in the crash of a bus that exploded after falling from a bridge north of the town of Bela in Balochistan province.

"The dead bodies are unrecognizable," said Hamza Anjum, an official from Lasbela district where the tragedy occurred.

One of the three survivors extricated from the wreckage succumbed to his injuries shortly after and the other two are in serious condition, said Hamza Anjum.

The bus was carrying 48 passengers when it hit a pillar, before going over the railing of the bridge on which it was traveling.

Leaving from the capital of Balochistan, Quetta, the vehicle had driven at night towards the port city of Karachi, located about 700 kilometers to the south.     

Road safety often questioned in Pakistan

"We fear the driver may have fallen asleep," said Hamza Anjum, adding that the speed could also be the cause of this drama.

An investigation must be opened to determine this and DNA tests will be carried out to identify the "severely mutilated" victims, the official said.

Transport safety is often questioned in Pakistan, where mortality is particularly high on the roads, between expressways in poor condition, lax regulations and dangerous driving.

Buses there are often filled to the limit of their capacity and wearing seat belts is not a widespread reflex.

Road accidents involving a single vehicle are frequent. 

A minibus fell in November at the bottom of a ravine filled with water, in the south of the country, resulting in the death of twenty people including eleven children.

In August, a collision between a bus and a tanker truck filled with gasoline in the suburbs of Multan, capital of the eastern province of Punjab, caused as many victims.

According to estimates by the World Health Organization (WHO), more than 27,000 people died on Pakistan's roads in 2018. Deadly shipwrecks are also common in the country, where many damaged and overloaded boats sail despite the risk of falling.

Many Pakistanis do not know how to swim, especially women, discouraged by conservative local mores.

For them, the full suits, which weigh very heavy once wet, are an additional danger on the water.

With AFP

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