Police say at least 51 people died in Londiani after truck hit people and vehicles in latest road catastrophe
A road accident in western Kenya killed at least 51 people, police said.
It happened at a notorious junction when a truck driver lost control of his vehicle, crashing into other motorists.
The mangled metal remains of several vehicles could be seen as emergency services arrived at the scene on a highway between the lakeside towns of Nakuru and Kericho.
Police commander Geoffrey Mayek said 30 others were seriously injured but added the number “could be more”.
He also raised concerns that “one or two” people could still be trapped underneath the overturned vehicle.
Tom Mboya Odero, another regional police commander, was quoted by AFP news agency as saying the lorry travelling towards Kericho “lost control and rammed into eight vehicles, several motorcycles, people who were by the roadside, vendors, and other people who were on other businesses”.
Eye witnesses told Kenyan media the driver had been trying to avoid a bus that had broken down on the road.
Kenyan president William Ruto said he had been distressed to hear that some of those killed were “young people with a promising future and business people who were on their daily chores”.
“We urge motorists to be extra cautious on roads, especially now when we are experiencing heavy rainfall,” Mr Ruto added in a tweet.
An image circulated online showed what appeared to be a red shipping container lying on its side at the bottom of a small grassy bank, at the side of a road.
The town’s governor, Dr Erick Mutai, described the incident as a “dark moment” for Kericho.
“My heart is crushed,” he said in a Facebook post, alongside the photograph of the container.
Dr Mutai added that the necessary emergency services had been deployed to the scene.
Rainfall is thought to be hindering rescue operations, according to local reports, but it is not clear if the weather played a part in the accident.
Road accidents are a well known problem in East Africa, because roads outside the bigger cities are often narrow.
The World Health Organization said in September last year that Africa had the highest road traffic fatality rate in the world, with more than 800 people killed every day.
Last year 34 people died in central Kenya when their bus careered off a bridge and plunged into the Nithi River below.