Fribourg police have confirmed that nine people were on board the PostBus when a man set it on fire, resulting in six deaths. The perpetrator has been described by police as 'disturbed', and an investigation into the bus's safety mechanics confirmed the doors opened properly once stopped.

"These opened normally when the vehicle stopped. Since the fire broke out when the bus was moving, opening them could take place only after the bus had come to a complete stop."
"There was no indication that he had been a danger himself or others."
Six lives have been extinguished in what police are now treating as a calculated act of murder-suicide. Fribourg authorities have confirmed the harrowing final toll of the blaze that consumed a PostBus in Kerzers last Tuesday. Precisely nine people were on board the vehicle when it was turned into a moving infernoāthe driver and eight passengers, including the arsonist himself.
While three passengers managed to escape the flames, the trauma is far from over. One survivor, a 56-year-old woman, remains in critical condition, fighting for her life. In a display of desperate bravery, two bystanders who were not on the bus suffered injuries while attempting to rescue the trapped victims. This was not a mechanical failure; it was a deliberate strike. The hypothesis of a murder-suicide is now the primary line of inquiry, shattering the peace of the Fribourg countryside and leaving a community grappling with an incomprehensible loss.
The man behind the horror has been identified as Peter M., a 65-year-old Swiss national living on the fringes of society. Described by police as 'disturbed,' Peter M. was a recluse, residing in a camper van near a farm in Canton Bern. His life was unraveling rapidly; facing eviction after failing to pay site fees and struggling with severe health deterioration, he was a man with seemingly nothing left to lose.
Reports paint a picture of profound isolation. Although he had been registered at various addresses in the Bernese Seeland region over the last two decades, he lived an 'unconventional life,' disconnected from the community. While he was known to police for violations of the Federal Narcotics Act, social services in Aarberg claimed there was 'no indication' he posed a danger to himself or others. This assessment has now proven catastrophically wrong, raising urgent questions about how a man on the brink of such violence could slip through the cracks.
Public anxiety regarding the safety of the PostBus fleet has surged, but investigators are categorical: the bus did not fail its passengers. Technical forensics confirm that the vehicle's two doors were fully operational. However, a terrifying reality dictated the victims' fateāthe doors were engineered to open only when the vehicle was at a complete halt.
Because the fire was ignited while the bus was still moving, the escape routes remained sealed until the driver could bring the vehicle to a stop. This delay, dictated by safety protocols, likely proved fatal in the seconds that mattered most. The fire spread with devastating speed, trapping victims inside a moving cage. While the mechanics worked as designed, the incident highlights the horrifying vulnerability of passengers during an internal attack. PostBus has announced additional training, but for the victims in Kerzers, the protocol held firm while the tragedy unfolded.
Could this tragedy have been prevented? Just days before the attack, Peter M. had been admitted to a hospital in Bern for an undisclosed condition but vanished shortly before the incident. The hospital reported him missing, and police patrols were actively searching the area and his camperābut they were too late.
The timeline reveals a system struggling to contain a spiraling crisis. The perpetrator was under administrative guardianship and known to the Authority for the Protection of Minors and Adults. Despite his history of addiction and deteriorating mental state, the red flags did not trigger an intervention strong enough to stop him. Now, over 150 peopleāfamilies, survivors, and witnessesāare receiving psychological support as they grapple with the aftermath of a crime that slipped through the safety net of Swiss social services.