Four French children killed after train mows into school bus

The bus was struck by the train in Millas about 18 kilometres west of the city of Perpignan, close to the Spanish border.
In this photo provided by France Bleu, rescue workers help after a school bus and a regional train collided in the village of Millas, southern France. | AP
In this photo provided by France Bleu, rescue workers help after a school bus and a regional train collided in the village of Millas, southern France. | AP

PERPIGNAN: At least four children were killed and 19 people injured, seven seriously, on Thursday after a train crashed into a school bus at a level crossing in southern France.

The bus, which was carrying around 20 students from a local secondary school, was struck by the train in Millas about 18 kilometres west (11 miles) of the city of Perpignan, close to the Spanish border.

"The bus was very badly hit," the public prosecutor in Perpignan, Jean-Jacques Fagny, said.

The dead and critically injured were all travelling in the bus. Of the 12 who suffered minor injuries, three were train passengers, police sources said.

France Bleu regional radio reported that the train ploughed into the rear of the bus. Pictures posted on French media showed the bus had been severed in two.

Around 70 emergency workers, backed by four helicopters, were deployed as part of the rescue effort. The crash site was cordoned off to the media.

The local L'Independant paper cited one of the rail passengers, named only as Barbara, as saying the impact "was very powerful and we thought the train was going to derail".

The reason for the collision was unclear. Local politician Robert Olive described the scene as a "vision of horror".

The national railway operator SNCF told AFP that "according to witnesses, the level crossing was working as normal" but that an investigation would be carried out to confirm the cause.

The families of the children rushed to the scene to try to get news of their loves ones, an AFP reporter at the scene witnessed.

President Emmanuel Macron tweeted: "All my thoughts for the victims of this terrible accident involving a school bus, as well as their families. The state is fully mobilised to help them."

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe flew to Millas by helicopter from a meeting in the south-central city of Cahors. 

Transport Minister Elisabeth Borne and the head of the SNCF, Guillaume Pepy, were also on their way to the accident site.

"It's a terrible event," Education Minister Jean-Michel Blanquer said, expressing "profound sadness".

The security department for the Pyrenees area, where the collision took place, said the accident involved a train travelling west from Perpignan to the town of Villefranche de Conflent.

The accident is the third involving several fatalities on French railways in the past four years.

In 2015, a high-speed TGV train being tested on a stretch of the line between Paris and the eastern city of Strasbourg derailed after hitting a bridge at 243 kilometres-per-hour, killing 11 people onboard.

In 2013, seven people were killed when a commuter train slammed into a station south of Paris. A signalling defect was blamed for that crash.

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