A train crashed into a school van at a level-crossing in the Belgian ​town of Buggenhout on Tuesday, killing four people including ​two special needs pupils, authorities said.

The driver and an adult ⁠accompanying the pupils also died while two other students were ​badly injured.

Images in Belgian media showed a white minivan lying on ​its side near the track, its front badly crumpled.

Transport Minister Jean-Luc Crucke said security camera footage showed the crossing’s safety barriers had come down.

“What could ​have been a beautiful spring morning suddenly turned into a ​pitch-black day,” East Flanders Provincial Deputy Kurt Moens told news outlet VRT NWS.

European ‌Commission ⁠President Ursula von der Leyen said on X: “Today, Europe grieves with Belgium.”

PAST ACCIDENTS

The accident occurred early on Tuesday near Buggenhout station, about 23 kilometres (14 miles) north of Brussels.

The van was carrying seven ​pupils with special ​needs to ⁠their school, and a chaperone, Belgian federal police spokesperson An Berger said.

RTL quoted a spokesperson for ​the state railway infrastructure operator, Infrabel, saying that the ​train ⁠driver had applied the emergency brakes but that “the shock was extremely violent.”

Belgium, where a dense railway network criss-crosses towns and villages, has ⁠a history ​of accidents at level-crossings.

Since 2021, 36 ​people have died in 168 such accidents, according to Infrabel’s website.