One person is dead and two people have life-threatening injuries after a bus rolled while travelling along a notorious highway.

A woman is dead and at least one person has life-threatening injuries after a bus rolled on one of Australia’s most dangerous roads.
Emergency services were called to the intersection of the Bruce Highway and Rangemore Road at Gumlu in Queensland’s Whitsundays region about 4pm on Thursday after reports of a crash involving a bus with 29 people on board.
A woman died at the scene after suffering multiple significant traumatic injuries, a Queensland Ambulance Service spokesperson said.
A total of 19 people were taken to hospital, though police confirmed no one else had died as of Friday morning.
One person had been trapped under the bus, according to the Queensland Fire Department.
One person in life-threatening condition was transported by road to Ayr Hospital and then flown to Townsville University Hospital.
Another person in potentially life-threatening condition was flown by helicopter to the Townsville hospital.
Several other passengers were taken to Townsville, Ayr and Bowen hospitals by ambulance, private bus and plane in stable condition.
Eleven ambulances as well as two helicopters and a Royal Flying Doctor Service plane attended the scene.
No other vehicles are believed to have been involved in the incident.
The bus driver, a 70-year-old Mackay man, was taken to hospital with minor injuries.
The road was closed in both directions and long delays were expected.
Police are appealing for witnesses to come forward.
The incident occurred near the site of a collision involving a Greyhound bus in June 2024, which killed three passengers and seriously injured others.
The Bruce Highway has long been considered one of the most dangerous roads in Australia.
Stretching from Brisbane to Cairns, the highway is used by more than 100,000 vehicles every day, according to NRMA.
Of the 302 people killed on Queensland roads in 2024, 41 died on the Bruce Highway while another 7500 were hospitalised after driving on the road, according to data from the state’s Department of Transport and Main Roads.
The stretch from the Sunshine Coast to Gympie is widely regarded as the most perilous part of the highway.
A 2024 NRMA survey found that more than 66 per cent of people believed there were too few overtaking lanes on the highway while a third of respondents said they avoided travelling on the road during family holidays.
The federal government’s budget earlier this week earmarked an extra $812 million for the second stage of upgrades to the Bruce Highway to bolster safety. It was on top of $758 million already delivered during stage one.
Police will give more details about Thursday’s accident later on Friday.
-with AAP
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