Events

"I am afraid of taking the bus": to retrace, 24 hours later, the route of the Lleida accident

Thursday morning about twenty passengers were taking the bus that covers the route to La Granja d'Escarp while the authorities investigate why the driver lost control of the vehicle

02/07/2026

LleidaLife goes on. At the same time. At the same place. But on a different bus. Work never stops. This Thursday, at seven in the morning, Angi, José, and Oukakalong were boarding the Lleida - la Granja d'Escarp bus again, as they had done on Wednesday, the day when, suddenly, the vehicle they were traveling in crashed into the wall of the Diputació de Lleida: the "most serious" accident in the city's history, as described by the mayor of the capital of Segrià, Fèlix Larrosa. Of the 44 injured, nine people remain hospitalized, four of them in the ICU. Of these, two are in critical condition and two are stable within gravity.

Angi's face reflects the horror of what happened 24 hours earlier: a slight cut on her nose, a bump on her forehead, jumbled memories. "It was horrible, everyone was screaming. I thought I was going to die," explains this Colombian woman who was heading to Aitona. Beside her, José nods. He was in the back of the bus, the part that was less damaged by the impact. From inside the vehicle, he had the impression that the driver, who had been working for three days and was accompanied by another driver, accidentally accelerated after losing control. The accident occurred a few meters from the bus station, on Rambla de Ferran, just as the journey began. If it had happened in another space, José is clear that the 44 passengers could have died.

Cargando
No hay anuncios

This Thursday, Oukakalong had no choice but to get back on the bus where yesterday he saw some of his friends seriously injured. This Gambian works in a fruit warehouse in Soses and admits he has "anxiety" after what he experienced. "I'm afraid to take the bus," he admits, although words are unnecessary: his face speaks for itself. He is scared, waiting for the bus that the new driver, Adil, takes out of the station at 7:12 AM. On board, 18 more people. "It was a very difficult day," confesses Adil, accustomed to making the route to La Granja d'Escarp.

Loses control

A few seconds later the bus passes in front of the Diputació de Lleida building. Eyes turn to the building's wall, scratched by the vehicle's impact. It is the only mark of the tragedy: two whitish areas on the stone. The workers have fixed it quickly. The cleaning services have just cleaned the area. There are no marks on the road. The lamppost that the bus took was already replaced in the afternoon. Only the tree that was violently uprooted by the impact is missing. A few meters away, Juan, Sergi, Òscar, and Albert watch the bus pass while they finish their coffee at Cafeteria Rambla. They are forty meters from the accident site. They were all there on Wednesday, the day of the crash. They remember how the vehicle was going straight and, suddenly, it turned sharply "ninety degrees" until it hit the building's wall. They believe the bus was not going excessively fast (it's a 20 km/h zone), but that the novice driver lost control when she hit a metallic part that protects the sidewalk, where there is a stop for urban buses. At that moment, they point out, the woman accelerated or, at least, "she didn't know how to brake." Precisely, the police investigations must determine what caused the accident – whether it was the impact with something – and the subsequent reaction of the driver.

Cargando
No hay anuncios

A person leaving the building braked the vehicle and caused the passengers and the second driver, who were on the front right side, to be seriously injured. The second driver was thrown out. One of the Diputació's workers, Gerard, who was crossing the boulevard towards the building, saw it. "It was very tough, it smelled of an accident, of burnt plastic," he recounts. He saw the impact from behind. He wasn't aware of the magnitude of what had happened until he went around the vehicle and saw the front. A woman was applying a tourniquet to the driver's leg. There were people coming out bloody. Others were trying to break the windows to get out of the vehicle. On Wednesday, Gerard found it difficult to work and needed a colleague to accompany him on his usual route through the territory. "There were three seconds of silence and, suddenly, screams," adds Juan. Sonia saw it from the other side, frontally. A few meters away, while setting up the terrace of the cafe where she works. "It was horrible, like a bomb. Bang, bang, bang," she nervously recounts. While calling 112, she was counting the injured.

Cargando
No hay anuncios

The bus passed between two cement benches in front of the Diputació before crashing into the building. A few meters away, precisely where the driver lost control, there is a stop for city buses. Francisca and Patricia were saved by a few seconds. Every day, at 7:15 AM, they usually stop there. When they arrived at the stop this Wednesday, the vehicle had just crashed. "They were getting off the bus, some lying on the street," says Francisca, whom her daughter called a few minutes later to see if she was okay, aware that the place where the accident had happened is where she waits every day, at the same time.

The majority of the passengers who took the crashed bus are workers. Many from the countryside. Sub-Saharan and North African seasonal workers who go to fruit warehouses or to pick fruit, and who live in Lleida. "When it's school season, there are also some students," explains Crista, who also usually takes this bus every week. She is one of the users who wait inside Lleida's giant bus station, which opened a few months ago. People wait drowsily in the silence, unaware of the maneuvers of the bus driven by Adil towards La Granja d'Escarp and on which Angi, José, and Oukakalong are also traveling today, while some of their colleagues remain hospitalized in critical condition.