A three-vehicle crash near Tīrau, believed to have been caused by a vehicle crossing the centre line, killed one person and injured 14 others.
Emergency services, including five rescue helicopters, transported the injured to hospitals in Waikato, Rotorua, Tauranga and Auckland.
Police are investigating the crash, which is the second in six months in the Waikato region involving a passing lane without a median barrier.
Early indications suggest a vehicle crossing the centre line resulted in a three-vehicle crash near Tīrau that claimed one life and put 14 other people in hospital.
Emergency services were called to the horrific scene at Piarere on State Highway 1 at 2pm on Wednesday, after a bus load of foreign tourists and two other vehicles collided on a northbound passing lane.
The DNZ Travel bus was carrying 11 tourists and a driver.
Police said three other people were spread across two other vehicles, a black Mazda ute and a silver Mazda liftback car.
The driver’s side of the bus was mangled and the impact caused major damage to the fronts of the other two vehicles, with debris strewn across the highway near the intersection with Paparamu Rd.
One person died at the scene, two people were critically injured, and four others suffered serious injuries.
Hato Hone St John said 13 injured people were transported by road and air to Waikato, Rotorua, Tauranga and Auckland hospitals.
Northern Rescue said both Auckland Westpac Rescue Helicopters airlifted a man in his 40s and a teenager to Auckland City Hospital.
Five rescue helicopters were sent to the scene including two from Auckland, one from Taupō and one from Waikato.
They joined the Eastland Rescue Helicopter from Tairāwhiti, which was the first to arrive after being diverted mid-return flight from Hamilton.
The Eastland rescue chopper said it flew a patient in a critical condition to Waikato Hospital.
Two more patients were also flown to Hamilton.
In total, St John responded with seven ambulances and rapid response units.
Fire and Emergency New Zealand, police and the Serious Crash Unit were also at the scene and the road was closed until 9pm to enable a scene examination.
Taupō‘s road policing manager, Senior Sergeant Fane Troy, said several of the injured had been discharged from hospital on Thursday morning and police were collecting statements from them, along with evidence to establish the cause of the crash.
“Early indications are that we have had a vehicle cross the centre line. The reason for that is uncertain. That is part of our investigation, to determine why that has happened.”
Troy earlier said the straight stretch of road was not a black spot. The weather conditions were also fine and clear.
Troy said the police’s thoughts went out to those affected by this tragedy and he reminded motorists to take their time and be courteous to other road users, and safe when driving.
He said the police would not be in a position to name the person who died until next of kin were notified.
DNZ Travel is a luxury tour company in New Zealand aimed at foreign travellers, according to its website, which was partly written in simplified Chinese.
It promotes custom itineraries, including visits to Rotorua, Hobbiton and Waitomo Caves in the Waikato and Bay of Plenty regions and says it is not a rental car company.
“All our vehicles are driven by our experienced drivers with their passenger service endorsement.”
A person who answered the phone at DNZ Travel confirmed the tourist group was okay but declined to comment further and referred questions to police.
The Chinese Embassy said its initial inquiries found the tourists were Korean, while the driver’s nationality was still being confirmed.
Yesterday’s crash was the second in six months in the Waikato region involving a passing lane where a median barrier did not separate oncoming traffic.
The first was in Te Awamutu in May, when five people died after two cars collided on SH3 after one crossed the centre line.
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