Download
Bulgaria and North Macedonia mourn after 46 die in tourist bus crash
Catherine Newman

Bulgaria, North Macedonia and Kosovo are mourning the 46 people were killed in one of Europe's worst road accidents.

A tourist bus crashed into highway rails and caught fire near Sofia in Bulgaria. It was returning from Istanbul in Turkey and was on its way to Skopje in North Macedonia. 

Only seven people survived, who managed to escape by breaking a window and jumping out of it, according to initial accounts. 

A list of passengers on the trip that was released by Skopje media suggested most of the victims, who included 12 children, were from North Macedonia's ethnic Albanian minority. 

Investigators have been sifting through the ashes of the burned-out vehicle to determine whether a technical defect or human error caused the crash. It still remains unclear exactly how many people were on board. 

The survivors were hospitalized in Sofia and in a stable condition, despite their injuries and bad burns, according to Maya Argirova, head of the Pirogov burns clinic.

The bus was registered with the Besa Trans tourist agency, which organizes tours to Istanbul, and was the last of four from the company to return from the trip. North Macedonia's transport minister told reporters on Tuesday the vehicle was not registered for international transport. 

Around 250 pupils from Skopje's Ismail Qemali school laid flowers at a monument to medieval Albanian hero Skanderbeg in tribute to five classmates, all from the Jahi family, who were killed in the crash with their mother. 

 

Students lay flowers to pay tribute to the fellow students from their elementary school, in Skopje, North Macedonia. /Robert Atanasovski/AFP

Students lay flowers to pay tribute to the fellow students from their elementary school, in Skopje, North Macedonia. /Robert Atanasovski/AFP

Students remember five of their peers who died in the accident who were from Ismail Qemali elementary school in Skopje, North Macedonia. /Robert Atanasovski/AFP

Students remember five of their peers who died in the accident who were from Ismail Qemali elementary school in Skopje, North Macedonia. /Robert Atanasovski/AFP

Students and people pay their respects to those who died in what is said to be Europe's deadliest road accident in a decade. /Robert Atanasovski/AFP

Students and people pay their respects to those who died in what is said to be Europe's deadliest road accident in a decade. /Robert Atanasovski/AFP

Students hold flowers before laying them to pay tribute to the students from their elementary school. /Robert Atanasovski/AFP

Students hold flowers before laying them to pay tribute to the students from their elementary school. /Robert Atanasovski/AFP

Some 250 pupils from Skopje's Ismail Qemali school laid flowers. /Robert Atanasovski/AFP

Some 250 pupils from Skopje's Ismail Qemali school laid flowers. /Robert Atanasovski/AFP

Hundreds of students paid their respects as the government in Skopje announced three days of mourning. /Robert Atanasovski/AFP

Hundreds of students paid their respects as the government in Skopje announced three days of mourning. /Robert Atanasovski/AFP

 

Tuesday's accident occurred on a notorious section of highway with steep gradients and unclear demarcation lines. 

The government in North Macedonia declared three days of mourning and ordered flags fly at half-mast. Bulgaria and majority ethnic Albanian Kosovo also declared Wednesday a day of mourning for the victims. 

In Bulgaria's capital Sofia people placed flowers and toys in front of the North Macedonian embassy to express their sympathy and condolences.

 

Flowers were placed at a memorial for the victims at North Macedonia's embassy in Sofia. /Nikolay Doychinov/AFP

Flowers were placed at a memorial for the victims at North Macedonia's embassy in Sofia. /Nikolay Doychinov/AFP

A woman cries as she lights a candle in front of North Macedonia's embassy in Sofia. /Nikolay Doychinov/AFP

A woman cries as she lights a candle in front of North Macedonia's embassy in Sofia. /Nikolay Doychinov/AFP

A woman pays her respects at a makeshift memorial for the victims of the bus crash at North Macedonia's embassy in Sofia, Bulgaria. /Nikolay Doychinov/AFP

A woman pays her respects at a makeshift memorial for the victims of the bus crash at North Macedonia's embassy in Sofia, Bulgaria. /Nikolay Doychinov/AFP

 

Passenger Lulzim Sulejmani recounted to local media what he remembers happening at the time, saying the bus hit something on the right, the wheels burst and the fire spread before the bus moved left and came to a halt. 

"There was a lot of smoke ... People started to throw up, scream, like in a horror movie," the 26-year-old from Presevo, Serbia, told Klan Macedonia.

"I managed to escape because I took the hammer from the bus and broke the glass. I took my fiancee and five more people."

His fiancee, Medina Lutfi, 25, says she also survived by jumping out of the window.

"I was sleeping and suddenly I heard fellow passengers crying and screaming ... there was black smoke, an explosion like a bomb ... I heard children crying, there were a lot of children," Lutfi said. 

Iliya Nikolov, a night guard at a nearby construction site, said he heard a "boom" and was among the first on the scene and called for emergency help. 

"We ran down the road ... and there was something burning in the guard rails. The fire was smaller in the beginning but then the back of the bus flamed up," Nikolov told bTV.

 

Officials work at the site of the bus accident near the village of Bosnek outside Sofia in Bulgaria. /Nikolay Doychinov/AFP

Officials work at the site of the bus accident near the village of Bosnek outside Sofia in Bulgaria. /Nikolay Doychinov/AFP

Search Trends