Three people are dead and three others injured after a head-on crash Monday afternoon on Autoroute Guy-Lafleur, about 100 kilometres east of Gatineau, Que.
Sûreté du Québec (SQ) were called around 5:15 p.m. to a stretch of the former Autoroute 50 near montée Boucher in the municipality of Grenville-sur-la-Rouge.
Provincial police said an eastbound sedan unexpectedly veered into the westbound lane of the former Autoroute 50, striking a westbound vehicle.
One woman who was in the vehicle that was struck died at the scene of the crash. On Tuesday afternoon, the SQ confirmed two more occupants of the same vehicle who were in critical condition have also died.
A third person in that vehicle suffered non-life-threatening injuries.
Two occupants of the vehicle that veered into oncoming traffic sustained serious but non-life-threatening injuries, police said.
Speaking in French, Sgt. Marc Tessier described the collision as “fairly violent” and said it caused a fire to break out. The highway was temporarily closed but has now been reopened.
Tessier said it’s too early to speculate on what caused the vehicle to veer into the opposing lane until police get a chance to speak with the injured occupants.
“The investigation will continue [Tuesday] morning and in the coming days to see what happened. When the people who were in the other vehicle are able to meet us, they will be met by investigators,” he said.
This is the third fatal collision on the highway since March.
Speaking in French to Radio-Canada, Grenville-sur-la-Rouge Mayor Tom Arnold called the frequency of fatal collisions on the highway near his community “ridiculous.”
Arnold said he and other officials have been asking Quebec’s Ministry of Transportation to build a safety barrier between the opposing lanes.
“This has been urgent for a long time,” he said.