
by Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Chief International Correspondent
JAKARTA (Worthy News) – A crash that killed more than a dozen wedding guests on Indonesia’s main island of Java has renewed concerns about road safety in the world’s fourth-most populous nation, where fatal traffic accidents claim thousands of lives each year.
Local traffic police chief Undang Syarif Hidayat confirmed that a pickup truck carrying wedding guests was crushed between two trucks on the northern coastal highway near Kiajaran Kulon village in Indramayu Regency, killing 13 people and injuring five others.
He said the crash occurred as the group was returning home after attending a wedding in neighboring Parean village.
Police said the victims were traveling in the open cargo bed of a pickup truck when the vehicle slowed near a highway median to make a U-turn and was struck from behind by a wing-box truck traveling in the same direction.
DEADLY COLLISION
“The impact pushed the pickup into the opposite lane where it was hit again by another truck,” Hidayat told reporters. “The powerful collision hurled more than a dozen people from the pickup truck onto the highway.”
Five survivors remained hospitalized with injuries ranging from minor to serious, police said.
Authorities have launched an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the crash.
The tragedy has renewed concerns about the widespread use of pickup trucks to transport passengers, overloaded vehicles, hazardous driving conditions, and inconsistent enforcement of traffic regulations in parts of Indonesia.
ROAD SAFETY ISSUES
Residents have also complained that alleged police corruption in Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim nation, has undermined road safety by weakening enforcement of traffic regulations, an issue raised repeatedly by anti-corruption advocates and local media.
Road safety experts have long warned that many fatal crashes involve passengers riding in vehicles not designed for public transport, particularly in rural areas where safer transportation is often limited.
Indonesia records one of Southeast Asia’s highest numbers of road fatalities each year, with motorcycles accounting for a large share of deaths.
However, serious crashes involving buses, trucks, and pickup trucks also occur regularly, especially on Java, the country’s most populous island.
REPEATED TRAGEDIES
The latest disaster follows a series of deadly transportation accidents across Indonesia in recent years, including fatal bus crashes linked to brake failures, overloaded vehicles, and collisions involving trucks and passenger vehicles on major highways.
Authorities have repeatedly pledged tougher enforcement of traffic laws and improved road safety standards.
Yet road safety advocates say stronger vehicle inspections, better driver training, improved infrastructure, and stricter compliance with transportation regulations remain essential to reducing the country’s heavy death toll on the roads.
The tragedy also comes amid broader concerns over road safety across Asia, where crashes involving overloaded buses, trucks, trains, ferries, and other forms of transportation have claimed hundreds of lives in recent years, underscoring the continuing challenge of improving transportation safety in many rapidly developing nations.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
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