‘Killer bees’ sting 6 people to death in Nicaragua after bus plunges into ravine

**WARNING: This story contains graphic photos.**

Six people, including a mother and her 8-year-old daughter, were stung to death by a swarm of “killer bees” during a bus ride in Nicaragua earlier this week.

A bus carrying 60 passengers was making the hour-long journey from Jinotega to San Sebastián de Yalí in Nicaragua on Monday when the vehicle skidded off the road and plunged 165 feet down a ravine, according to local reports via the New York Post.

While all passengers survived the initial terrifying drop, the bus landed in a coffee plantation field that was home to a number of disturbed – and angry – killer Africanized bees.

The passengers were stung repeatedly by the angry insects, and victims’ bodies were covered head to toe with hundreds of angry red bite marks.

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Six people ultimately died from the killer bees’ stings and 14 others were hospitalized after the incident. 

The New York Times reported the victims as: Reyna Isabel Olivas Montalván, 84; Santos Arnulfo Calderón Castellón, 38; Dilcia Flores Amparo, 32; and Kenia Jazmín Soza Bonilla, 19.

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Also, among the dead were Eneyda Tórrez Zelaya, 47, and her 8-year-old daughter Andrea Carolina.

Bee stings on victim's torso

According to the USDA, the Africanized honey bee, also known as the killer bee, is a cross-breed between the European honey bee and the African honey bee.

The so-called killer bee is the result of experiments in Brazil decades ago. The insects then migrated to the U.S.

Although weather is a factor, a normal bee season runs from mid-March through October.

Arm with hundreds of bee stings

 

The bees also constantly on guard for possible threats to their hive, and even find the color of a shirt or scent of cologne as threatening.

Health officials advise people who disrupt a beehive to cover their heads, run away and take shelter, and not to flail their arms.

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