Merita Qemalli, a 62-year-old woman of Albanian origin, tragically lost her life following a violent collision between the car she was traveling in and a truck on the A14 highway near Ancona. The accident occurred as the family was returning from their Easter holidays, also leaving her partner, her sister, seriously injured and her 10-year-old son in a more stabilized condition. Authorities have launched an investigation for vehicular homicide, seizing the vehicles to clarify the dynamics of the crash in the Montedomini tunnel. "Merita Qemalli was the name of the woman who died in the accident that occurred overnight between Sunday and Monday on Highway 14, just before the Ancona North toll booth. She was 62 years old and of Albanian origin. Her injuries were very serious, and she died in the emergency room of Torrette Hospital. The woman was traveling in a Ford station wagon, heading to Chiaravalle, together with her partner, a 49-year-old man from Senigallia, his 10-year-old son, and her 47-year-old sister, also Albanian but residing in Patti, in the province of Messina. Their car collided with a truck in the Montedomini tunnel, between Ancona South and Ancona North, just before the exit for Castelferretti and Chiaravalle. They were only a short distance from home when the accident occurred under the Montedomini tunnel. The truck, driven by a Romanian woman living in the province of Barletta, was traveling at low speed due to a flat tire. The collision was extremely violent, completely destroying the front part of the Ford. Two passengers remained trapped in the wreckage and were extracted by firefighters. The 49-year-old driver underwent surgery at Torrette and remains in critical condition; his sister-in-law also underwent surgery and is in critical condition. The child, transferred to Salesi Hospital, is in stable condition and out of danger. The Fano highway police conducted investigations. The Prosecutor's Office has opened a criminal case for vehicular homicide and serious injuries, seizing the vehicles. It remains unclear whether the truck had its lights on and whether it could have been safely stopped before the tunnel. The four passengers in the Ford were returning from their Easter holidays in Sicily.", the article states.