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Police closed the A396 road after a coach left the road on its way back from a zoo yesterday Ben Birchall/PA

One child dead after coach crashes on way back from school trip in the UK

Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he was being ‘kept up to date’ on the incident.

ONE CHILD HAS died and several people are being treated in hospital for serious injuries after a coach returning from a school trip slid down a 20ft bank in south-west England.

The coach was travelling back from a zoo in Devon to Somerset with approximately 60 to 70 passengers on board when it left the road on a steep area known as Cutcombe Hill.

Staff and pupils were among 21 people taken to hospital for treatment, including several who suffered serious injuries.

The road remained shut overnight, Avon and Somerset Police said.

The children’s Minehead Middle School will be closed today, the BBC reported. The school caters for pupils aged between nine and 14, and is five days away from the end of term.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer said in a post on X: “A heartbreaking update on the school bus crash in Somerset.

“There are no adequate words to acknowledge the death of a child. All my thoughts are with their parents, family and friends, and all those affected.”

An off-duty firefighter travelling behind the coach was able to start freeing passengers immediately, a press conference yesterday evening heard.

The crash happened on the A396 at Cutcombe Hill, between Wheddon Cross and Timberscombe, at about 3.15pm on Thursday, police said.

Gavin Ellis, of Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue Service, said: “We were mobilised to a major incident of a coach that had overturned onto its roof and slid approximately 20ft down the embankment.

“This was a very complex and technically difficult incident for our crews to deal with, and I’m grateful for the tireless effort and actions of the crews in doing everything they could for those who were trapped and as quickly as safely as possible.”

Beacon Education Multi-Academy Trust, which runs the school, said it was with “deep sadness and heartbreak” that it confirmed that a pupil from Minehead Middle School had “tragically died following a road traffic incident earlier today involving a coach carrying pupils and staff returning from an educational visit”.

“A number of other people have been taken to hospital, some of them with serious injuries. This includes two children who were taken to hospital by air ambulance,” the trust said in a statement.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with the family, friends, and all those affected by this terrible accident.

“Our entire school community are devastated by this news, and we will do everything we can to support everyone affected.”

A resident who lives near the crash scene described the incident as “horrendous”.

The resident, who asked not to be named, told the PA news agency: “The coach has gone down the slope. It’s pretty steep around here and it’s a big coach.

“There are no barriers along there or anything. We’re used to it, you don’t even notice it.

“I can’t believe it happened, quite honestly, it’s the biggest thing I have known to go over the slope.

“It’s horrendous, and I’m just so sorry for all those kids on that coach.”

Rachel Gilmour, MP for Tiverton and Minehead, said the fatal school coach crash in Minehead was “tragic” and she is “heartbroken for the parents and the school and the wider family”.

Asked about the area, Gilmour told BBC Breakfast: “It’s a very difficult road, very, very steep, very windy, and it’s just the nature of rural roads in my constituency, you know, Minehead famously, only has one road that takes you into it on the A39 and if you’re coming from where I live in Bampton or across the Moor, those are the roads that you have to use.”

Local coach operator Ridlers, which owns the bus, said it had been liaising with the school and the emergency services and confirmed the 70-seater vehicle was travelling back from Exmoor Zoo.

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