At least 39 dead in Panama migrant bus crash
At least 39 people, most of them undocumented US-bound migrants who had just survived a perilous jungle crossing, died in a bus crash in Panama, officials said.
Panama's National Migration Service said the injured, including children, were being treated at various hospitals and clinics, without saying how many there were.
The latest death toll, it added, was based on "preliminary information."
The bus had "66 passengers on board" when it plunged down a ravine and hit a minibus some 400 kilometers west of the capital Panama City, the press statement said.
The bus was transporting migrants who had crossed the Darien Gap -- an inhospitable jungle area bordering Colombia -- and were moving westward toward Costa Rica from where they aimed to continue their journey through Central America and Mexico, and ultimately to the United States.
The bus was on its way to a hostel in Gualaca near the Costa Rica border, where the passengers were to have rested before continuing their journey.
Local media said the crash happened as the driver was turning the bus around after missing the hostel.
It allegedly left the road on a bend and plunged down a ravine, hitting a rock and a minibus on a road below.
The nationalities of the occupants have not been revealed but Cuba's foreign minister Bruno Rodriguez said on Twitter that Cubans were among the dead.