A 15-year-old girl and a truck driver were killed Monday after a suspension bridge over a river in southwest France collapsed, reigniting a debate over infrastructure safety in the wake of last year's deadly disaster in Genoa.
Two vehicles plunged into the fast-flowing Tarn river after the bridge between the towns of Mirepoix-sur-Tarn and Bessieres, 30 kilometres north of Toulouse, gave way.
The bridge collapsed after the suspension cables snapped, crashing into the waters of the Tarn, with only a small portion left exposed above the river.
The girl was travelling in the car with her mother, who was plucked from the water by bystanders, Toulouse public prosecutor Dominique Alzeari said.
The truck driver's body was found after a day-long search by more than 60 rescue workers, including divers, according to rescue workers and the mayor of Mirepoix-sur-Tarn, Eric Oget.
"The body, which is in the truck, has not yet been freed," Oget told AFP.
Five people, including two rescue workers and some local people who tried to save the victims, were seriously injured, according to the region's security department.
The bonnet of the sunken car could be seen sticking out of the water as helicopters circled overhead.
Authorities had earlier said that a van might also have fallen into the river and that "several" people might be missing, but Alzeari said "that does not appear to be the case."
An investigation into the cause of the collapse was under way.
The environment ministry said that recent inspections of the bridge had "shown no security defects".
The council of the local Haute-Garonne area said the bridge, which dated to 1931 and had been renovated in 2003, underwent a "thorough" inspection in 2017 showing "no structural problem".
A visual inspection of the 155-metre (510-foot) structure, some 6.5 metres wide, confirmed that conclusion in 2018, the environment ministry said.
Important crossing point
Oget described it as a "very important crossing point" for people going to work in the regional capital Toulouse on the other side of the river.
Many pedestrians use the bridge, he said, describing its collapse as a "real trauma" for the local population.
Audrey Laujac, a 36-year-old woman who lives 100 metres (yards) from the scene of the accident, told AFP her son had just taken the school bus across the bridge before it collapsed.
"We never imagined that the bridge might collapse," she said, her voice choked with emotion.
Oget said articulated lorries were not allowed onto the bridge but that some had nonetheless been seen crossing over in the past.
Police searched the premises of the drilling company that owned the truck to try to establish whether it was within the 19-tonne load limit allowed on the bridge.
The issue of bridge safety was thrust into the spotlight in Europe after the collapse of a motorway bridge in the Italian city of Genoa in August 2018, in which 43 people died.
An audit of France's bridges commissioned by the Senate in the wake of the Genoa disaster called for major investments to avoid a similar tragedy in France.
"Unfortunately what happened illustrates what we said in the report, which is that the state of our bridges poses a real danger," Senator Herve Maure, who oversaw the audit, told AFP.
"If a bridge which is not listed as dangerous collapses, what is the situation of those bridges which were clearly identified as dangerous in the report?" he asked.