At least 29 people were killed Monday after a bus careered off one of India's busiest roads which has become known as the "highway to hell" because of its poor safety record.
The driver was suspected to have fallen asleep before the bus crashed into a railing and fell into a drain between two flyovers on the Yamuna expressway which connects New Delhi with Agra, the city famed for the Taj Mahal.
Eighteen people were injured, some critically, police said.
More than 150,000 people a year are killed on India's roads which are notorious for poor design and speeding drivers.
Onlookers and Indian police gather around the crumpled remains of a bus that crashed on the Delhi-Agra expressway. AFP
The 165-kilometre (100-mile) Yamuna expressway was India's longest six-lane highway when it opened in 2012 but about 900 people been killed on the road since, according to authorities, and Indian media have dubbed it the "highway to hell".
The state-run bus was taking more than 50 people from Lucknow in northern Uttar Pradesh state to Delhi when the accident happened at about 4.15am (2245 GMT) some 20 kilometres outside of Agra.
It fell more than 12 metres (40 feet) into a drain below the road, crushing the roof of the bus. Running water in the drain complicated rescue efforts, police said.
"Twenty nine persons have died and 18 others are injured," said Agra district magistrate N.G. Ravi Kumar at the scene of the accident. "It appears that the driver was drowsy."
People living in the area said they were woken by the crash and found the badly-mangled bus submerged in blackish-grey water.
"We rushed out of our homes and saw people screaming for help. We got into the drain and tried to save some of them. Soon police arrived and quickly brought cranes," one witness told reporters.
Agence France-Presse