World

Argentina police bus crash kills at least 43

At least 43 Argentine police officers were killed in a bus accident when the vehicle fell off a bridge in the northern part of the country.

Convoy of 3 buses carrying officers was travelling near Salta, 1,500 km north of Buenos Aires

Aerial view showing gendarmerie members collecting evidence after a bus drove off a bridge in northern Argentina. (Agence France-Presse/Getty)

At least 43 police officers were killed Monday when a bus in a convoy in northern Argentina went off the side of a bridge and fell 20 metres.

The bus was one of three carrying police near Salta, a city about 1,500 kilometres north of Buenos Aires.

"For reasons that are still unknown, the bus lost control while entering the bridge and fell into the creek bed below," said a statement issued by the National Gendarmerie, a special police force typically charged with patrolling frontier regions.

Rescue workers are seen attending to the scene of a police bus crash near the city of Salta, Argentina. At least 43 officers were reported killed when the bus flipped and fell off a bridge. (Prensa Polsal/Reuters)

Local television images showed rescue crews working around the overturned bus, which authorities said was carrying around 60 people.

Gustavo Diaz, head of a group of volunteer firefighters in the area, told Argentine state agency Telam that 20 police were severely injured and were being treated in area hospitals.

The group was heading to the province of Jujuy, the country's most northern region that borders Bolivia.

A bus in a convoy carrying police officers fell off a bridge near Salta, Argentina, about 1,500 kilometres north of Buenos Aires. (CBC/Google)

Roads in Argentina, a large country with a land mass about four times the U.S. state of Texas, are poorly maintained in many rural areas.

The government announced that Security Minister Patricia Bullrich and National Gendarmerie director Omar Ariel Kannemann were travelling to the scene.

The crash comes as President Mauricio Macri begins his first full week in office. Macri, elected last month on a platform that included improving Argentina's rural roads, issued a statement offering condolences to the families of the victims.

"It's for this reason that we need to improve the roads so that this doesn't keep happening," the statement read.