Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Four dead after crash involving semi-trailer carrying timber in B.C.'s West Kootenays

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jul, 2024 02:08 PM
  • Four dead after crash involving semi-trailer carrying timber in B.C.'s West Kootenays

Mounties in British Columbia's West Kootenay region say four people are dead after a crash that closed a stretch of Highway 6 for 11 hours.

Slocan Lake RCMP say it happened south of Nakusp at about 5:50 p.m. on Friday, when a passenger truck crossed the centre line while a semi-trailer was approaching in the oncoming lane.

RCMP say the semi driver tried to avoid the crash, but his trailer hit the ditch, causing the rig to flip and scatter its 45-tonne load of timber over the highway.

They say part of the load hit the passenger truck, killing all four people inside.

Cpl. James Grandy says the four killed were from Nelson, about 115 kilometres south of the crash site. 

RCMP say witnesses managed to rescue the driver of the overturned semi and he was taken to hospital with minor injures, while his vehicle was destroyed by fire.

MORE National ARTICLES

Strong Vancouver Q2 commercial real estate sales

Strong Vancouver Q2 commercial real estate sales
A statement from the board says 726 commercial properties sold in the Lower Mainland between April and June, a nearly 115 per cent increase from sales in the same period last year.

Strong Vancouver Q2 commercial real estate sales

VPD appeals for help to ID knife-wielding man

VPD appeals for help to ID knife-wielding man
The concierge was working at a hotel on Robson Street on October 8 when he confronted a man who had entered the parkade and was peering into cars. The man pulled out a knife and allegedly threatened the hotel employee, before fleeing out to the street.

VPD appeals for help to ID knife-wielding man

Former defence chief to go on trial in May 2023

Former defence chief to go on trial in May 2023
Ten days of trial dates were set during a brief, virtual courtroom hearing this morning, three months after military police charged the former Canadian Armed Forces commander following a sexual misconduct investigation.

Former defence chief to go on trial in May 2023

Federal vaccine rules raise human rights concern

Federal vaccine rules raise human rights concern
The Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat says 240,000 employees have filed their attestations of their vaccine status to the government, out of approximately 268,000.

Federal vaccine rules raise human rights concern

NACI expands booster eligibility guidance

NACI expands booster eligibility guidance
The committee now recommends mRNA boosters to people who received two doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, adults over the age of 70, front-line health-care workers with a short interval between their first two doses, and people from First Nations, Inuit and Métis communities.

NACI expands booster eligibility guidance

No COVID-19 test at U.S. land border: Higgins

No COVID-19 test at U.S. land border: Higgins
The office of New York congressman Brian Higgins says U.S. Customs and Border Protection won't be requiring a negative COVID-19 test for fully vaccinated travellers in order to cross the land border with Canada.

No COVID-19 test at U.S. land border: Higgins