At least 79 people were killed when a bus carrying Afghans deported from Iran crashed on one of the country’s most dangerous highways on Tuesday night, the Afghan Interior Ministry said.
Officials described the crash as one of the country’s deadliest traffic incidents in years, and comes as hundreds of thousands of deported Afghans are streaming across the Iranian-Afghan border.
Nineteen children were among those killed and there were only two survivors, both of whom were injured, said Mufti Abdul Mateen Qani, a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, in a statement to The Washington Post. Other officials put the death toll at 81.
Hamdullah Fitrat, a Taliban spokesman, told The Post the bus collided with a Mazda truck and a motorcycle, describing the crash as an accident.
In videos shared by officials, firefighters are seen trying to extinguish a wreckage that is fully engulfed in flames. According to a statement released by Herat province officials, many victims appeared to be women and children, but were so “badly burned that their gender cannot be identified.” The statement added that the bus may also have crashed into a truck carrying fuel barrels.
Ahmadullah Muttaqi, a local government spokesman in western Afghanistan, said in a post on X that authorities are committed to a “thorough inquiry” into Tuesday’s crash.
The accident happened near Herat, the biggest city in western Afghanistan and the capital of the province by the same name.
The city has been the primary entry point for more than a million Afghans who have either been forcibly deported or pressured to leave by Iranian authorities this year, according to the United Nations. The deportations accelerated in the aftermath of Israel’s June airstrikes on Iran, when the Iranian government accused some refugees of being spies for Israel, fueling a wave of xenophobia and suspicion.