Two dead, seven injured in Dakar Rally collision

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Two people were killed and seven others were injured in a head-on collision between a Dakar Rally support vehicle and a taxi near Peru's border with Chile, race organizers said yesterday.

 Two people died and others were severely injured in a tragic accident near the Chilean border during the Dakar Rally Wednesday.

Two people died and others were severely injured in a tragic accident near the Chilean border during the Dakar Rally Wednesday.

The incident happened at 9:30pm local time on Wednesday, 10 kilometers from the frontier, a statement on the race website dakar.com said.

One of two taxis hit the support vehicle head-on while a second cab overturned as its driver tried to avoid the collision.

Two people in the first taxi, including the driver, were killed and seven people, four of them Peruvian, were injured. Three of the injured were in the rally support vehicle. All were taken to hospital for treatment.

An investigation has been launched with the Peruvian authorities, the statement said.

The collision came after the fifth stage of the race from Arequipa in Peru to Arica in Chile. The 8,400km event is being staged in South America with 459 vehicles.

Some 59 people, including 20 spectators, have lost their lives in the race over the years but organizers have been keen to play down the dangers.

This year, around 150 security staff as well as 60 doctors and surgeons are on hand, backed up by five helicopters and 10 medical vehicles for emergencies.

Defending champion Stephane Peterhansel finished second on the fifth stage, finishing 1 minute 23 seconds behind Mini teammate Nani Roma of Spain. But Peterhansel saw his overnight lead increase from 5:16 seconds to 9:54 seconds over Qatar's Nasser al-Attiyah, the 2011 champion, who finished seventh on the stage, six minutes behind Roma after getting lost on the testing desert track.

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