The wreck of one of the buses involved in the collision is seen in southern Sinai yesterday.

Agencies/Cairo

At least 33 people died and dozens were injured when two buses collided before dawn yesterday in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, the state news agency and security sources reported.

The Middle East News Agency (Mena) quoted local health ministry official Mohamed Lashin as saying that Russian, Yemeni and Saudi Arabian citizens were among the more than 40 people injured but did not give further details.

Lashin said that the injured were being transferred to two hospitals in the area. He said bodies were still being lifted from the wreckage so the death toll could rise.

The buses were travelling in the southern part of the Sinai, one of them from the Red Sea resort city of Sharm El Sheikh and the other from a Nile Delta province, security sources said.

The cause of the accident was not immediately clear.

The buses were carrying holidaymakers, local media said.

Egypt’s roads and railways have a poor safety record and Egyptians have long complained that successive governments have failed to enforce even basic safeguards, leading to frequent, deadly crashes.  

Nearly 13,000 people die and 60,000 are injured every year on the country’s roads, according to official figures.

At least 17 people were killed when a bus ploughed into a truck south of Cairo last month. A crash in the Sinai killed 24 people in March.

 

 

 

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