Mexican tourists injured in Peru bus crash

Four Mexicans were injured in a crash on Monday when a tourist bus plunged off a road near the ancient Inca city of Machu Picchu in Peru, the Mexican government said.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (SRE) said on social media that four Mexicans sustained “multiple fractures” when the bus in which they were traveling crashed.

The bus went off the edge of a winding mountain road near Machu Picchu on Monday, amid foggy conditions.

At least five other tourists were also injured, but no deaths were immediately reported. Those injured were taken to a nearby medical facility for treatment.

In a video posted to social media by the journalist Lourdes Mendoza, a Mexican who was on the bus said that three other Mexicans were seriously injured.

Speaking from a clinic, Jorge Polanco said that those three people — among whom is his wife — had broken their legs and hips.

“They don’t know how to treat them,” added Polanco, who was also injured, according to Mendoza’s post.

The news website Perú 21 reported that approximately 32 foreign and Peruvian nationals were on board the bus when it crashed onto a lower section of a winding road on Monday morning.

The bus was returning to the town of Aguas Calientes from Machu Picchu when the accident occurred, according to the bus company Consettur MachuPicchu.

According to witnesses cited by Perú 21, the bus driver’s sight was impeded by fog.

The SRE said that the Mexican Embassy in Peru was in contact with the injured Mexicans and would provide them with the assistance they require.

In another video posted to X by Mendoza, Polanco said that Peruvian authorities were “trying to transport those injured by train,” presumably to a better-equipped hospital.

However, “they’re not organized, no one knows what to do,” he said.

The town of Aguas Calientes is located northwest of the city of Cusco. A train trip between the two destinations takes more than four hours.

At least 25 people were killed in a bus accident in Peru’s Andean Ayacucho region in July, while the same number of people were killed in another bus crash in the South American country’s northern Andean mountains in April.

According to Reuters, “deadly bus accidents are common in Peru, where many buses travel on precarious mountain roads or are driven by inadequately trained drivers.”

With reports from Reforma, El Universal, Perú 21 and AP

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.

Mexico City is sinking faster than ever, new NASA data reveals

0
After centuries of draining the lake water around it and overexploiting its remaining aquifer, Mexico City is sinking from its own weight, with little underneath to hold it up.
Yeraldine Bonilla Valverde, a 33-year-old former state lawmaker, was serving as general secretary of the Sinaloa government before her appointment as interim governor.

Yeraldine Bonilla Valverde sworn in as interim governor of Sinaloa

0
The northern state of Sinaloa has a new governor after Rubén Rocha Moya stepped down on Friday night in the wake of U.S. charges of drug trafficking and ties to the Sinaloa Cartel.
People evacuated from a building following an earthquake

5.6-magnitude earthquake shakes Oaxaca

0
Oaxaca officials said no damage was reported despite the magnitude of the temblor, confirming that a review to analyze possible impacts on infrastructure and basic services had been carried out in all 570 municipalities of the state.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity