Family of Thai school bus fire survivor break down in tears when they see him return home
Published date: Wed, 02 Oct 2024 14:17:49 +0700
This is the heart wrenching moment worried relatives broke down in tears as they were reunited with a youngster who survived the horrifying school bus fire in Thailand.
Moving footage shows the family sobbing as they welcomed emotional schoolboy Kittipat Chamnongsang back to the Wat Khao Phraya Sangkharam School in Uthai Thani province on October 1 evening.
The young pupil was incosolable as his brother was among the 23 passengers - including three teachers and 20 schoolchildren aged between seven to 15 - killed in the tragic inferno that erupted along Vibhavadi Rangsit Road on the outskirts of Bangkok.
Heartbroken grandmother Noon Wangplab, 61, said she was devastated as her grandchild was among the pupils listed as missing by rescue workers.
She said: 'We didn't even get to chat as she immediately left to catch a bus to school in the morning. The school has been holding field trips every year. I cannot believe this would happen.'
Uthai Thani governor Theerapat Katchamat was also at the school to oversee the schoolchildren's return.
The heavily modified 54-year-old coach running on CNG gas burst into flames in Pathum Thani shortly after 12:30 pm local time on October 1. It was said to have lost control when a front tyre blew out.
A fire reportedly started in the undercarriage as the vehicle hit the concrete road barriers.
Officials said the youngsters from the Wat Khao Phraya Sangkharam School in Uthai Thani were on an educational visit to an electricity plant when the incident happened.
The bus driver, Saman Chankut, 48, allegedly fled after briefly trying to battle the inferno at the scene. He was caught hiding in his wife's house in Ang Thong province on October 1 evening.
Police Major General Yutthana Jonkhun, commander of the Pathum Thani Provincial Police, said Saman will be face a raft of charges including 'reckless driving causing damage to persons or property', 'negligent driving causing mental or physical injury', 'causing the death of another person through negligence', 'driving on the road causing damage to people and not stopping to provide assistance', and 'failing to report to the police, causing death to others'.
He added: 'The driver will be interrogated and the security camera footage will be examined. The Office of Police Forensic Science will thoroughly inspect the vehicle's condition with the Department of Land Transport and relevant organisations. After reviewing all the evidence, we will determine if more charges will be filed.'
Saman claimed he had tried to find a fire extinguisher to put out the blaze, but ran away when he saw it grow uncontrollably. He said he panicked and fled to a relative's house to escape authorities.
Police Major General Chayanon Meesati, deputy commander of Provincial Police Region 1, said the charred wreckage has been towed to the National Memorial for investigation.
Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra said: 'As a mother, I would like to express my deepest condolences to the families.'
Thailand has one of the world's worst road safety records. Ministers have set the goal of reducing fatalities from 32.7 deaths per 100,000 people to 12 per 100,000 people by the year 2027.