
Bus with musicians crashes in western India, killing 13 and injuring 29 others
The exact cause of the crash was not immediately known.
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The exact cause of the crash was not immediately known.
An eyewitness said immediately after the crash, the driver stepped out of the bus, ripped his clothes off and started screaming.
The bus rolled onto its side after driving off the road and crashing into an embankment Monday morning, officials said.
Turkey has a poor record of road safety. Some 5,362 people were killed in traffic accidents last year, according to the government.
A local official referred to the accident's location as a "blackspot," meaning a hotspot. Early speculation centered on brake failure as the accident's cause.
Two of the passengers were in "at least serious condition," the Los Angeles Fire Department said.
The bus crashed into the back of a truck that had pulled over so the driver could fix a flat tire on a desert highway.
All 27 suffered minor injuries and 12 refused to be taken to local hospitals, fire officials said.
The truck, crammed with miners and their families, was headed to the capital of West Papua province to celebrate Easter.
Several people are dead after a bus carrying student-athletes from the University of the Southwest's men's and women's golf teams collided head-on with a truck outside Odessa, Texas. Ryan Tipton, the university's provost and vice president of academic affairs, spoke with CBS News about how the school community is responding.
Peru is grieving after its third major accident in less than a week. Meanwhile, a court in Bangladesh ordered the death sentence for six Islamic militants in connection with the murder of two gay-rights activists, and a massive oil spill from Syria's largest refinery is threatening marine life and livelihoods along the country's Mediterranean coast. Also, a few black particles were discovered in one vial of Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine in Japan, prompting authorities to shelve the batch. CBS News foreign correspondent Lucy Craft joined "CBSN AM" from Tokyo with more on those world headlines.
CBS News foreign correspondent Ian Lee joins CBSN AM with the latest headlines from around the world, including Prince William's response to allegations of racism in the royal family, a deadly bus crash in Indonesia, and how Japan is remembering the tsunami disaster 10 years later.
At least 53 people are dead after a bus crash in the west African nation of Cameroon. In Pakistan, a court ordered the release of a man convicted of killing Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl. Poland enacts one of the strictest abortion laws in Europe. And he EU and AstraZeneca feud over vaccine shipments. CBS News foreign correspondent Ian Lee joins "CBSN AM" with today's global headlines.
The bus was in danger of falling down an embankment, authorities said.
The crash involved one tour bus, three tractor trailers and a passenger vehicle.
At least 26 people are dead after a bus plunged 250 feet into a ravine on the Indonesian island of Sumatra. A ship spilled 600 gallons of diesel just off the coast of one of the Galapagos Islands, raising concerns about the vulnerable ecosystem. And more than a dozen people were hurt in a crowd crush when an Australian mall's giveaway event went wrong. Cindy Pom rounds up the world headlines from London.
When Canadian hockey player Ryan Straschnitzki was paralyzed from the chest down in a devastating bus crash in April 2018, he was told he'd never walk again. Now his dad has shared stunning video of his first steps.
Local television showed bodies scattered over the rural hillside next to the Atlantic Ocean
The accident happened at the Westboro station in a neighborhood west of downtown Ottawa
Illinois State Police say semi was going in wrong direction when it collided with bus with members of girls JV basketball squad on board
Arkansas state police are looking for the cause of a bus crash that killed a 9-year-old boy. Nearly 50 passengers, most of them children, were hurt when the charter bus flipped Monday on Interstate 30 near Little Rock. It was taking youth football players home to Memphis after a championship tournament in Dallas. Omar Villafranca reports.
"No matter what happens in the rivalry, we're all Washingtonians, and we all care for the well-being of those kids," said Washington State University athletic director
The University of Washington’s Marching Band will not perform at tonight’s rivalry game at Washington State.
Holiday shopping season on target to beat last year's sales; Man who opened his motel to flooding victims has given away about $50,000 worth of services.
Chinese authorities released video showing a bus driving off a bridge in China after a brawl between its driver and a passenger.
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and President Joe Biden will now have to sell their debt ceiling deal to lawmakers.
President Biden went to Arlington National Cemetery to laud the sacrifice of generations of U.S. troops who died fighting for their country.
At least 9 people were taken to area hospitals after being shot, police said.
A historic impeachment trial in Texas to determine whether Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton should be permanently removed from office will begin no later than August in the state Senate.
The sheriff's office says the person who was killed was pronounced dead at the scene. No arrests have been made.
After failing to stop for a state trooper on Interstate 95 in Houlton, Maine, the suspect drove his truck toward the Canadian Port of Entry, where a corporal opened fire.
The Shenzhou-16 crew will replace three taikonauts who are wrapping up a six-month stay aboard the Chinese space station.
Passengers on the Carnival Sunshine cruise ship described 40-foot waves and broken glass during an hours-long storm off the coast of Charleston, South Carolina.
Thousands have flocked to a Missouri town to see the body of a nun who died four years ago and whose body has barely decomposed.
The sheriff's office says the person who was killed was pronounced dead at the scene. No arrests have been made.
The musicians of Linton Hall School's Fife & Drum Corps, some as young as 6 years old, honored veterans at Dulles International Airport outside Washington, D.C., continuing a tradition that goes back to the American Revolution.
Ralph Yarl, who was shot in the head in April, walked with his mother at a brain injury awareness event in Kansas City, Missouri, on Monday.
At least 9 people were taken to area hospitals after being shot, police said.
A historic impeachment trial in Texas to determine whether Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton should be permanently removed from office will begin no later than August in the state Senate.
Bill would put hundreds of millions toward a new stadium for the Athletics, who aim to move to the Vegas Strip by 2027.
The WGA has already said it won't picket the Tonys after organizers agreed to host an unscripted ceremony.
As part of an airline passenger's lawsuit, the AI invented relevant cases that didn't exist and insisted they were real.
Russia's war in Ukraine is spurring investments in renewable energy, but the world still must scale back fossil fuels to meet climate goals, energy group says.
The lawsuit claims drivers urinated in bottles and defecated in dog waste bags in their delivery vans to ensure that they weren't disciplined for failing to stay on pace with their deliveries.
A historic impeachment trial in Texas to determine whether Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton should be permanently removed from office will begin no later than August in the state Senate.
President Biden went to Arlington National Cemetery to laud the sacrifice of generations of U.S. troops who died fighting for their country.
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and President Joe Biden will now have to sell their debt ceiling deal to lawmakers.
The Kremlin is upset with remarks the South Carolina senator made about Ukraine.
On this "Face the Nation" broadcast, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Microsoft president and vice chair Brad Smith join Margaret Brennan.
Charleigh Chatterton gave birth to her daughter with no complications. Days later, her "chances of survival were slim" after she got a rash "as hot to touch as a boiled kettle," she said.
This is the first time fewer than 9,000 new weekly admissions were reported.
You probably clean your shoes if you step in something muddy or disgusting. But when you get home, do you always de-shoe at the door?
Musk said the company would try to use the implants to restore vision and mobility in humans who had lost such abilities.
Paxlovid, Pfizer's COVID-19 treatment pills, could go to the private market by late summer.
Scientists say global warming is exacerbating adverse weather.
"It could be hormones driving him to find a mate. Or it could be loneliness," one marine biologist said of the wayward Beluga.
Russia's war in Ukraine is spurring investments in renewable energy, but the world still must scale back fossil fuels to meet climate goals, energy group says.
Police were investigating the unexplained discoloration spotted near the iconic Rialto Bridge, amid speculation about a possible stunt by environmentalists.
The legislation, one of the harshest anti-LGBTQ laws in the world, also imposes a death sentence for the crime of "aggravated homosexuality."
The WGA has already said it won't picket the Tonys after organizers agreed to host an unscripted ceremony.
Singer Billie Eilish responded to criticism about her clothing in a series of Instagram stories over the weekend.
The live-action remake of the 1989 Disney classic exceeded other box office hits and new releases on Memorial Day weekend.
The 80-year-old Chilean-born writer, whose latest novel is "The Wind Knows My Name," talks about her tumultuous family history, and the passion and courage of her stories' female characters.
Chilean-born author Isabel Allende has written more than two dozen books that have been translated into some 40 languages. The 80-year-old Allende, whose latest novel is "The Wind Knows My Name," talks with correspondent Rita Braver about her tumultuous family history, which inspired her stories' passionate and courageous characters; how her 1982 bestseller "House of the Spirits" changed her life; and about her foundation, which supports groups trying to help young girls at risk around the world.
Brad Smith, the president and vice chair of Microsoft, joins ""Face the Nation"" to discuss the future of AI — and if it could face government regulation.
The hacking operation code-named "Volt Typhoon" that targeted critical infrastructure in Guam and other locations in the United States is of "real concern," Microsoft president and vice chair Brad Smith tells "Face the Nation." Watch more of Margaret Brennan's interview with Smith Sunday on "Face the Nation."
Musk said the company would try to use the implants to restore vision and mobility in humans who had lost such abilities.
As part of "CBS Mornings'" "American Innovation" series, Mark Strassmann reports on space quickly becoming the next economic frontier, if you can stick the landing.
Nearly 20 years ago, the movie "I, Robot" warned of an impending robot revolution powered by artificial intelligence that views humanity as "scum." Now, what was once science fiction has become a paramount concern for tech executives and futurists. Mo Gawdat, former chief business officer for Google's secretive research and development lab "X," joins CBS News to discuss the future of AI.
Science tells us there's a connection between hurricanes and climate change. But how strong is it? And what can we expect for the future?
Some scientists believe America's breadbasket could soon be at risk of potentially emptying, and they're warning a relentless drought is harming the nation's wheat crops. Science journalist Jenny Morber, who reports on climate resiliency and food, joined CBS News to discuss how researchers are trying to solve the problem.
The Supreme Court has again weakened the power of the Environmental Protection Agency. This time it involves wetlands. Jess Bravin, Supreme Court correspondent for the Wall Street Journal, joins CBS News to break down the court's latest ruling and its implications for the environment.
PM Giorgia Meloni's far-right government tried and failed to block EU plans to ban all new fossil fuel-powered cars by 2035, but it's not giving up the fight entirely.
Three of the seven Colorado River states - California, Arizona and Nevada - have agreed to cut their water usage by 3 million acre-feet by 2026. Some 40 million people and more than two dozen Native American tribes depend on the Colorado River. CBS News senior national and environmental correspondent Ben Tracy breaks down the details of the historic deal.
The sheriff's office says the person who was killed was pronounced dead at the scene. No arrests have been made.
At least 9 people were taken to area hospitals after being shot, police said.
After failing to stop for a state trooper on Interstate 95 in Houlton, Maine, the suspect drove his truck toward the Canadian Port of Entry, where a corporal opened fire.
Iren Byers, 20, was arrested in connection with four shootings late Friday night in Mesa and an additional homicide earlier on Friday in Phoenix.
Three people were killed and five others wounded in a shooting at a motorcycle rally in New Mexico.
The Shenzhou-16 crew will replace three taikonauts who are wrapping up a six-month stay aboard the Chinese space station.
The first crewed flight of Virgin's spaceplane in two years sets the stage for customers to begin flights to the edge of space in June.
In an interview with CBS News, Peggy Whitson discusses her commercial visit to the International Space Station.
The Ax-2 private astronaut mission, two cargo launches and multiple spacewalks highlight a busy early summer aboard space station.
A camera team was able to identify what NASA called "an unusual surface change" near where the lander was supposed to end up.
Live performances are in full swing this summer. Scroll through our concert gallery, featuring pictures by CBS News photojournalist Jake Barlow and photographers Ed Spinelli and Kirstine Walton.
Despite losing three quarters of the blood in her body, Donna Ongsiako was able to help police find the person who almost took her life.
A look back at the esteemed personalities who've left us this year, who'd touched us with their innovation, creativity and humanity.
Vero Beach Police investigators focused on cellphone tower pings and surveillance footage cameras to catch a man who murdered his former girlfriend.
Lamar Johnson was convicted of Markus Boyd's murder in 1995. He always insisted he was innocent, but it would take almost three decades for a court to agree.
In North Carolina, we meet a U.S. Army veteran who continues to serve, but this time to help the people of Ukraine. And in Georgia, we spend time with a retired Marine who's helping veterans heal through art. Watch these stories and more on "Eye on America" with host Michelle Miller.
Linton Hall School's Fife & Drum Corps, made up of musicians as young as 6, greeted veterans on Memorial Day at Dulles Airport in Washington, D.C., carrying on a tradition that goes back to the American Revolution. Jan Crawford reports.
Forensic anthropologists at military labs have identified more than 1,200 soldiers, airmen, sailors and Marines who were reported missing from World War II through the Cold War. Mark Strassmann has the latest.
John Dickerson reports on the science behind airplane turbulence, why many eighth graders are failing U.S. history, and the end of Phantom of the Opera’s 35-year run on Broadway.
Using high-tech defense systems such as the American-built Patriot, Ukraine defended itself against increasing aerial threats from Russia. Debora Patta reports.