Police work at the burned-out shell of a bus near Muenchberg, Germany, on Monday. (Nicolas Armer/dpa via AP)

Police work at the burned-out shell of a bus near Muenchberg, Germany, on Monday. (Nicolas Armer/dpa via AP)

18 confirmed dead in fiery Bavarian bus crash; 30 injured

By Kirsten Grieshaber / Associated Press

BERLIN — A bus carrying German senior citizens on holiday crashed into a truck Monday on a highway in Bavaria and burst into flames, killing 18 people and injuring 30 others, some seriously, officials said.

The accident took place around 7 a.m. when the bus rear-ended a trailer-truck at the end of a traffic jam on the A9 highway near Muenchberg, not far from the Czech border. The accident led to long traffic jams on the A9, the main thoroughfare from Berlin to Munich.

It was not immediately clear what caused the initial traffic jam, but the bus seemed to have caught fire immediately, Transport Minister Alexander Dobrindt told reporters after touring the crash site.

“Two people are still in life-threatening condition,” he said.

The remains of 11 bodies were recovered from the bus, and forensic experts were still poring through the charred wreckage to try and identify and remove other remains, he said.

Two drivers and 46 passengers were on the bus, police spokeswoman Irene Brandenstein said, adding it was not known if the driver at the time was dead or alive.

Some 200 emergency crews were at the scene and five helicopters whisked the injured to nearby hospitals. Simple wooden coffins were wheeled in for the remains recovered from the blackened, twisted wreckage of the bus.

Police said the ages of those on the bus ranged from 41 to 81 and they were primarily from the eastern German state of Saxony. The news agency dpa reported that all passengers were Germans.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel thanked the emergency crews involved.

“Our thoughts are with the families of the victims and we wish all those who were injured a speedy recovery,” she said.

Dobrindt said when firefighters first arrived, the bus fire was so hot that they couldn’t get anywhere close to the burning vehicle to rescue those stuck inside. He also said recovery work was difficult because the bus was so badly damaged.

“All they could do was extinguish the fire,” he said. “The heat was so strong that nothing that’s inflammable is left from the bus — only the steel frame.”

The A9 highway remained closed on both sides for hours. Police tweeted later that the A9 road leading south would be shut down for the entire day.

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