Venice bus crash: Victims still unidentified almost 24 hours on
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Venice, Metropolitan City of Venice, ItalyVenice bus crash: Victims still unidentified almost 24 hours on.
The bus company emphasised that the 13-tonne vehicle was electric, discounting earlier reports that it also ran on methane gas. Fire brigade commander Mauro Longo told Il Gazzettino website that the bus's batteries caught fire and made the task of clearing the vehicle a complex operation.
Witnesses said they could hear people screaming, but the flames were too intense to get to them.
A 27-year-old Gambian worker and a colleague were among the first people to reach the scene. He told how he had pulled three or four people from the bus, including a young girl.
One man called Leonardo said he heard the sound of strong braking before the sound of the crash, and he rushed to find out what had happened. "I wanted to help," he told La Presse website, "but I was prevented by a friend of mine and a policewoman because the bus was still in flames and in danger of blowing up."
What is unclear is why the bus left the flyover on a downhill stretch of the road and careered through a guard rail and metal barrier. Police are looking at video from security cameras near the crash site.
The 40-year-old driver, Alberto Rizzotto, had worked for the bus company for seven years and there was no indication on the road that he had tried to brake before the crash.
In his last Facebook post, he said he was running a "shuttle to Venice".
The head of the Veneto region, Luca Zaia, said "everything points" to the driver being taken ill in the moments before losing control of the bus. However, he added that it was prudent not to speculate on the causes of the accident.
Massimo Fiorese, from La Linea bus company, said the vehicle was less than a year old and the driver highly experienced.
"There's a video of the bus just before it falls," he told the Ansa news agency. "The vehicle arrives, slows down and brakes. It's almost at a standstill when it crashes through the guard-rail. I think the driver must have fallen ill, because otherwise I can't explain it."
Firefighters eventually removed the wrecked bus from the scene early on Wednesday.
A reception point staffed by psychologists and psychiatrists has been set up at a nearby hospital to provide support for the victims' families.
Italy's Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said the country's thoughts were with the victims and their family and friends.
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