On a winding mountain highway in India-controlled Kashmir, a devastating Monday accident has claimed the lives of at least 21 people and left roughly 45 others with injuries after a passenger bus careened off a Himalayan roadway and tumbled down a jagged steep embankment onto a lower thoroughfare, local government officials confirmed.
The 42-seater passenger coach was significantly overcapacity when the crash occurred, carrying more than 60 passengers en route from Ramnagar town to Udhampur city. According to Prem Singh, a senior local civil administrator, the collision that triggered the disaster unfolded at a sharp, dangerous curve in the mountainous terrain: the bus struck a small three-wheeled auto-rickshaw, forcing the much larger vehicle to lose control and veer straight over the edge of the road. The bus fell roughly 100 feet (30 meters) before crashing onto the road below, and all passengers and crew aboard the auto-rickshaw also suffered injuries in the incident, Singh added.
Immediate rescue efforts were launched almost simultaneously by local residents and official emergency response teams, who scrambled to reach the remote crash site. Nineteen of the victims were pronounced dead at the scene, while two more succumbed to their injuries after being evacuated to area medical facilities. The injured, many of whom remain in critical condition, are currently receiving care at multiple local health centers across the region.
Following the tragedy, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi released a statement expressing deep condolences to the families of those killed and issued an announcement of planned monetary compensation for the families of the deceased and the injured survivors.
This fatal crash has once again drawn attention to India’s long-running and well-documented road safety crisis. The country consistently registers one of the highest annual road fatality rates globally, with hundreds of thousands of people killed and injured in traffic incidents every year. Transportation safety experts widely attribute the high frequency of deadly crashes to a combination of three major risk factors: reckless driving habits, poorly maintained and hazard-prone road infrastructure, and the continued operation of aging, unfit vehicles on public roadways.
