Skip navigation
sponsored by 

‘Death Road’ claims 2nd foreign cyclist of week

SUV collides with cyclists on Bolivian highway; accident leaves 9 dead

Descending nearly 11,800 feet in just 40 miles, this narrow dirt track is the only route connecting the city of La Paz to Coroico in North Yungas, Bolivia, and is referred to as the "World’s Most Dangerous Road".
Spencer Platt / Getty Images file

Search Flights


calendar

calendar


More Airfare Predictions and Deals



The great outdoors
Msnbc.com readers share their outdoor adventure photos
Summer vacations
Readers send in their photos from summer trips
updated 11:16 a.m. ET April 25, 2008

LA PAZ, Bolivia - A packed SUV collided with a group of cyclists on Bolivia's "Highway of Death" on Thursday, killing nine people — including a British man who was the second foreign tourist to die this week along the notorious road.

The accident took place just minutes after the cyclists began their tour on a paved section near a 15,400-foot Andean pass, said Lt. Col. Agusto Angulo, head of the La Paz transit police accident division.

A Toyota Land Cruiser carrying a driver and 12 passengers struck the group, killing 22-year-old Tom Austin, Angulo said.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

The vehicle then left the road and rolled 300 feet down a rocky embankment, killing eight people inside, Erbol radio reported.

British cyclists Daniel Roberts, 23, and James Marshall, 22, and five passengers in the SUV were injured, Erbol said. The British Embassy later confirmed the riders' identities but did not disclose more information.

Angulo suggested that the cyclists may have crowded into the vehicle's lane.

But Mercedes Solis, a lawyer for the parent company of tour operator Downhill Madness, insisted that the cyclists were riding on the shoulder.

The highway east from La Paz — the world's highest capital city — winds dramatically down the face of the Andes, dropping 11,800 feet in just 40 miles.

Image: Injured cyclist rests
Joao Padua / AP
British citizen Daniel Roberts, 23, rests at a hospital after a mountain-biking accident in La Paz, Bolivia.

The narrow, largely dirt track earned its macabre nickname for the frequency with which Bolivian buses would plunge off its 3,300-foot cliffs, killing hundreds a year until a new paved highway opened 2007.

But the old route's stunning vistas and hairpin turns now draw an estimated 25,000 thrill-seeking mountain bikers from around the world. At least 13 cyclists have died on the road in the past 10 years.

On Monday, Kenneth Mitchell, 56, of Fullerton, California, died when he tumbled from his bicycle and fell over a cliff along the highway.

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored links

Resource guide

Get Your 2008 Credit Score

Search Jobs

Find your next car

Find Your Dream Home

Find a business to start

$7 trades, no fee IRAs