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6 killed as passenger train and double-decker bus collide in Canada

Updated 11:06 PM ET

OTTAWA, Ontario Passengers screamed "Stop! Stop!" seconds before their bus crashed through a crossing barrier and into a commuter train during morning rush hour in Canada's capital on Wednesday, killing six people and injuring 30.

"He smoked the train," witness Mark Cogan said of the bus driver, who was among those killed. "He went through the guard rail and just hammered the train, and then it was just mayhem."

It was not immediately clear what caused the bus to smash through the lowered barrier at a crossing in suburban Ottawa.

The front of the double-decker bus was ripped away by the impact, and the train's locomotive and one passenger car derailed, though there were no reports of major injuries to train passengers or crew.

Officials in Ottawa said 10 of the injured were in critical condition as the crash brought trains on the national Via Rail's Ottawa-Toronto route to a standstill.

It was Canada's second major rail accident in less than three months. A runaway oil train derailed and exploded in a Quebec town on July 6, killing 47 people in the country's worst rail disaster in more than a century.

Tanner Trepanier said he and other passengers could see the four-car train bearing down on them as the bus approached the crossing.

"People started screaming, 'Stop! Stop!' because they could see the train coming down the track," Trepanier said.

But the driver didn't slow down, said Rebecca Guilbeault, who was on the bus with her 1-year-old son.

"I don't know if the bus driver blacked out," she said. "I've seen a few people dead, someone ripped in half."

Officials respond to the scene where a city bus collided with a Via Rail passenger train at a crossing in Ottawa, Ontario, Wednesday, Sept. 18, 2013. Terry Pedwell,AP Photo/The Canadian Press

Another passenger, Gregory Mech, said the train crossing has about a 90-degree bend and he didn't think the driver saw that the signals were flashing and the barrier was down.

"The bus actually hit the train dead on," Mech told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. "I could see that there were bodies on the train tracks. It was horrible."

Transit union president Craig Watson identified the driver killed in the crash as 45-year-old Dave Woodard. He said had been with the bus company for about 10 years.

Peyman Shamsi, a friend of Woodard who had started with OC Transpo 10 years ago, said he was "one of the nicest guys" at the bus company. "I'm surprised because he was a safe driver," Shamsi said.

Woodard, who leaves behind a wife and teenage stepdaughter, had celebrated his wife's birthday on Tuesday.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper took to Twitter to express his condolences:

The bus was on a dedicated transit line that runs parallel to a busy commuter artery just outside the suburban train station of Fallowfield.

Via Rail crossings have long been a concern, according to the national Transportation Safety Board's lead investigator, Glen Pilon, who said retrieving the black box recording was a priority to determine what went wrong.

Canada has seen 257 accidents involving passenger trains colliding with vehicles at level crossings over the last decade, the safety board said Wednesday.

Trains striking cars or trucks at rail crossings occur "with unfortunate frequency," said Grady Cothen, a former senior safety official with the U.S. Federal Railroad Administration.

Driver distraction or fatigue and poorly designed intersections all can be factors, he said.

In the U.S., buses are required to stop before proceeding through a railroad crossing, even if crossing gates are up and there is no signal indicating a train is coming, Cothen said.

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