At least 32 people were killed in two major road accidents in southeastern Turkey on Saturday, local media reported, with both tragedies unfolding in a similar manner.
In the first incident, in Gaziantep province, a bus crashed into an ambulance, a firefighting truck and a broadcast vehicle carrying journalists who were responding to an earlier crash, the DHA news agency reported.
Sixteen people were killed, including three firefighters, two ambulance workers and two journalists, and 21 more injured, the local governor said.
He added that the bus overturned and slid for 200 meters, hitting an ambulance and the broadcast truck, he added.
Photos from the scene showed the back of an ambulance ripped out and metal debris was strewn around it.
The collisions occurred on the highway between the cities of Gaziantep and Nizip.
In a second accident some 155 miles east, a truck plowed into pedestrians who had gathered at the site of an earlier accident involving three vehicles.
Again emergency responders were at the scene, in the town of Derik in Mardin province when the lorry crashed into the crowd.
Sixteen people were killed and a further 29 injured.
Turkish Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said that eight of the wounded in Derik were in critical condition.
A Turkish official said the Derik accident occurred after the brakes gave out on the truck.
Turkish media shared footage of the vehicle careening towards nearby vehicles and pedestrians trying to flee.
An investigation has been launched.