Injured Polish boys in stable condition

2 young boys hurt in Friday's bus crash in Inđija are in a serious condition, but their injuries aren't life-threatening.

Izvor: Beta

Saturday, 12.07.2008.

11:58

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2 young boys hurt in Friday's bus crash in Indjija are in a serious condition, but their injuries aren't life-threatening. 46 survivors of yesterday’s fatal bus crash have flown back to Poland. The plane sent by the Polish government last night carrying the family members of the six victims returned to Katowice this morning carrying 27 children from the bus, Polish media report. Injured Polish boys in stable condition “I was unable to talk them because of their mental state. I was scared to ask them how they felt,” said a Polish government representative who had traveled to Serbia, adding that “the hardest part was talking to the families of the victims—having to tell a woman and her daughter that their father had died, and that they should go home.” Two psychologists sent by the Polish government have stayed with the injured in Serbia. 13 of the most seriously injured have stayed in Serbia after doctors advised against traveling. Their families have been housed in accommodation provided by the Serbian Army and the Vojvodina authorities. Polish President Lech Kaczynsky yesterday thanked the Serbian authorities for all the help they had offered. The six victims—three men, a woman, and two children—have all been identified. They were part of a group of 66 passengers, mainly workers from the Zhemovit mine in southern Poland and their families, who had been returning from a holiday in Bulgaria when the crash took place. The families leaving for Serbia (FoNet)

Injured Polish boys in stable condition

“I was unable to talk them because of their mental state. I was scared to ask them how they felt,” said a Polish government representative who had traveled to Serbia, adding that “the hardest part was talking to the families of the victims—having to tell a woman and her daughter that their father had died, and that they should go home.”

Two psychologists sent by the Polish government have stayed with the injured in Serbia.

13 of the most seriously injured have stayed in Serbia after doctors advised against traveling. Their families have been housed in accommodation provided by the Serbian Army and the Vojvodina authorities.

Polish President Lech Kaczynsky yesterday thanked the Serbian authorities for all the help they had offered.

The six victims—three men, a woman, and two children—have all been identified. They were part of a group of 66 passengers, mainly workers from the Zhemovit mine in southern Poland and their families, who had been returning from a holiday in Bulgaria when the crash took place.

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