10 dead after semi loses brakes on Mexico City-Toluca highway; excessive speed blamed

Ten people are dead after a semi-trailer lost its brakes and slammed into at least 15 cars on the Mexico City-Toluca highway last night.

Mexico City police chief Raymundo Collins said that the 10th victim died in hospital this morning. Eight men and one woman were killed yesterday, all but one instantly.

A further 16 people were injured and are being treated in two hospitals in the capital.

The accident occurred just after 7:00pm in the Mexico City borough of Álvaro Obregón near the Santa Fe business district.

The driver of the trailer, a 41-year-old woman identified as Ana G., was uninjured.

Collins said the driver told authorities that her brakes failed and she completely lost control of the trailer, which was transporting a 24-tonne load from Toluca to Cuautitlán Izcalli, México state.

She said she had four to five years’ experience driving semi-trailers.

Security camera footage shows the truck traveling at high speed on the busy highway that links Mexico City with Toluca, the capital of neighboring México state. Accidents on the highway are common.

The mayor of Cuajimalpa, a borough next to Álvaro Obregón, said that excessive speed was to blame for yesterday’s horrific crash.

“This was caused precisely by speeding, the trailer traveled more than 400 meters without being able to brake due to the speed it was traveling at,” Adrián Ruvalcaba said.

Paramedics treated between 25 and 30 people for minor injuries at the scene of the accident. Some victims had to be cut out of their crumpled vehicles by rescue crews.

In a Twitter post at 12:20am, the Mexico City Secretariat of Public Security said the Mexico City-Toluca highway had been reopened to traffic.

Source: Milenio (sp), Excelsior (sp)  

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

Interior Ministry confirms public access to Las Cocinas, meeting one of the Punta de Mita protesters’ demands

0
The Nayarit coast's burgeoning fame as an attractive tourist destination has inevitably led to increased development, which has just as inevitably led to protests on environmental and public-access grounds.
oil spill cleanup on Gulf beach

The Feb. 6 oil spill continues to impact Gulf coast beaches and marine life

0
The oil spill that was slow to be officially recognized when it first happened is now being slow to stop causing damage, as hydrocarbons still stain Gulf coast beaches and affect marine life.
Sinaloa Governor Rubén Rocha Moya

US charges Sinaloa governor, 9 state officials with drug trafficking

7
Prosecutors in the United States have formally accused Sinaloa Governor Rubén Rocha Moya and nine other current and former Mexican officials of drug trafficking and related weapons offenses, alleging that they colluded with the Sinaloa Cartel.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity