JOHANNESBURG — A collision involving a minibus taxi and a truck killed at least 11 people in South Africa on Thursday, a local government official and emergency services said, just over a week after a similar road crash left 14 schoolchildren dead.
Thursday's crash happened near the city of Durban in the eastern KwaZulu-Natal province. Provincial transport department official Siboniso Duma said in a statement that 11 people, including a schoolchild, died at the scene, although that was according to preliminary information.
''Witnesses have alleged that the truck driver made a U-turn resulting in a head-on collision,'' Duma said.
Garrith Jamieson, spokesperson for the private paramedic service ALS Paramedics, told the Associated Press that 11 were dead and several people were critically injured, including the driver of the minibus, who was trapped in the wreckage.
According to Duma, a preliminary probe into the incident revealed that the truck was operating illegally with worn-out tires. At the same time, the taxi driver's professional license, necessary to operate any public transportation in South Africa, was found to have expired in 2023, he said.
The fatal collision came days after a deadly head-on crash between a truck and a minibus taxi being used to transport schoolchildren.
The driver of the minibus involved in that crash near Johannesburg on Jan. 19 was arrested and charged with 14 counts of murder after authorities alleged he was driving recklessly by overtaking a line of vehicles before crashing into the truck.
The 22-year-old driver was initially charged with an offense comparable to manslaughter, but prosecutors later upgraded the charges to murder.