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At Least 11 Dead in Western Mexico After Bus Careens off Highway

MEXICO CITY, May 1 (Reuters) – A ⁠holiday ⁠Labor Day weekend turned ⁠tragic on Friday as at least 11 ​people died and 31 others were injured when a tourist ‌bus crashed in Mexico’s ‌western state of Nayarit.

The bus, traveling from the ⁠state ⁠of Jalisco, veered off the highway and overturned near ​the town of Amatlan de Canas, the Nayarit state government said.

According to officials, the passengers were on their way to ​a recreational center in Nayarit. Emergency crews from Nayarit ⁠and Jalisco ⁠responded, closing the ⁠road ​to conduct rescue operations and investigate the cause of the accident.

Photos ​shared by the ⁠Nayarit government showed the bus on its side and covered in mud.

Deadly bus crashes are frequent in Latin America and on Mexico’s highways.

In September, at least ⁠10 people were killed and at least 61 were injured ⁠in central Mexico when a freight train smashed into a double-decker passenger bus. In February 2025, more than 40 people were killed in southern Mexico when a bus traveling to Tabasco from the tourist city of Cancun hit a trailer truck and caught fire.

Buses are a major mode of transport in Mexico, ⁠where passenger rail routes are limited. The government of President Claudia Sheinbaum is working to dramatically expand the nation’s passenger rail network to connect many ​parts of northern and central Mexico.

(Reporting by ​Brendan O’BoyleEditing by Rod Nickel)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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