Car Plows Through Copacabana Crowd, Kills Baby, Injures 15

Car Plows Through Copacabana Crowd, Kills Baby, Injures 15
A vehicle that ran over some people at Copacabana beach is seen in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Jan. 18, 2018. (Reuters/Lucas Landau)
Reuters
1/19/2018
Updated:
1/19/2018

RIO DE JANEIRO—A speeding car plowed through evening strollers on a crowded sidewalk of Rio’s famed Copacabana beach on Thursday in an apparent accident, killing an 8-month old baby and injuring 15 people, police said.

Injured pedestrians lay sprawled out on the sidewalk, recalling recent terrorist attacks by vehicles mowing down pedestrians, but there was no indication that the Copacabana incident was deliberate.

The G1 news website reported the driver, who fled the scene but was quickly arrested by police, said he had an epileptic fit, and medicine for epilepsy was found in the car.

A vehicle that ran over some people at Copacabana beach is seen in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Jan. 18, 2018. (Reuters/Lucas Landau)
A vehicle that ran over some people at Copacabana beach is seen in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Jan. 18, 2018. (Reuters/Lucas Landau)

An officer at the Copacabana police station confirmed the baby’s death by telephone and said 15 injured people were being treated in hospital. He did not know if the driver’s epilepsy fit had been confirmed.

Witnesses said on the Globo News network that the racing car shot over a bicycle path and across the sidewalk, hitting people and crashing through tables and chairs, before coming to a stop on the sand of the beach. The smashed widescreen and dented roof indicated the force with which the vehicle had hit people.

A vehicle that ran over some people at Copacabana beach is seen in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Jan. 18, 2018. (Reuters/Sebastian Rocandio)
A vehicle that ran over some people at Copacabana beach is seen in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Jan. 18, 2018. (Reuters/Sebastian Rocandio)

The sidewalk of the Copacabana crescent-shaped beach is a favorite summer evening walk for Rio residents and tourists that have begun to arrive in Rio ahead of Carnival celebrations next month.

By Anthony Boadle
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