TORONTO — A bus carrying mostly seniors collided with a semitrailer truck at a highway intersection in a rural part of the Canadian province of Manitoba Thursday, killing 15 people and injuring 10 more, police said.

Rob Hill, commanding officer of the Manitoba Royal Canadian Mounted Police, said the bus was carrying 25 people and authorities in Manitoba were deploying all their resources to the scene. Ten people were taken to hospitals.

TV broadcasters aired images of what looked like a large van or bus smoldering in a ditch near a transport truck with a smashed engine on a road. The pavement was littered with debris — broken glass, a large bumper and what looked like a walking aid. Seven blue and yellow tarps were stretched out.

RCMP Supt. Rob Lasson said, “As of right now the drivers of both the bus and truck are alive and in hospital." He did not say if they were among the 10 listed as injured.

Lasson said the bus was heading south and there would have been a stop and yield sign. He said the bus was crossing the eastbound lanes when it was struck by the truck that was going east, adding that who had the right of way is critical to the investigation.

“The public is reeling and asking a lot of questions and people are trying to determine if their loved ones were involved,” Lasson said. “Death on this scale is never normalized for us.”

The crash scene was in Carberry, 105 miles west of Manitoba’s capital, from Winnipeg and Regina.

“The news from Carberry, Manitoba is incredibly tragic,” Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tweeted. “I’m sending my deepest condolences to those who lost loved ones today, and I’m keeping the injured in my thoughts.”

A family support center has been set up at a Lutheran Church in Dauphin, Manitoba for relatives. Police said the people on the bus were from Dauphin and the areas around it.

Flags have been lowered to half-mast at the Manitoba legislature.

Barbara Czech, a spokesperson for Sand Hills Casino in Carberry, told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation the bus carrying the seniors was en route to the casino.

Kim Armstrong, the administrator of the Dauphin senior center, said the bus left from there Thursday morning.

She said the senior community is extremely tight knit in the city of around 8,600 people and the center is sometimes like a second home.

“It’s huge to lose so many individuals of our community and of course it is shocking. We just pray for those that are surviving,” she said.

Armstrong said seniors and community members often go on trips on buses to nearby events or casinos.

The crash brought back memories of the 2018 bus crash in the neighboring province of Saskatchewan that killed 16 people from the Humboldt Broncos minor league hockey team. Lasson said investigators in that crash are assisting.

“Sadly this is a day in Manitoba and across Canada that will be remembered as one of tragedy and incredible sadness,” said Hill, the RCMP commanding officer. 

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