The Phnom Penh Post

Toll in DR Congo railway accident rises to 75 dead

-

THE death toll in a train crash in southeaste­rn Democratic Republic of Congo has reached 75, officials said, as experts began looking at the causes of the crash.

Officials on March 12 gave a toll of 60 men, women and children killed in the accident, which happened on the night of March 10 when a freight service train derailed.

The new toll came from Fabien Mutomb, head of the state railway company SNCC, after he visited the site with a team assembled to investigat­e the disaster.

Of the 125 people injured 28 were in a critical condition, said the communicat­ions ministry.

Rail officials have not said what caused the crash, but investigat­ors will be looking at the condition of the track.

The province’s interior minister, Deodat Kapenda, who was among those who visited the site, said in a statement the evening of March 13 that the accident appeared to have been caused by a sudden loss of traction.

Mutomb, in his statement, said one possible cause might have been the overloadin­g of the train because of people illegally hitching a ride on it.

“Measures will be taken to ensure that this kind of incident does not happen again,” and those responsibl­e would be punished, he added.

On March 12, the SNCC’s director of infrastruc­ture Marc Manyonga Ndambo told AFP the train had been made up of 15 wagons, 12 of them empty.

It had been coming from Luena in a neighbouri­ng province destined for the mining town of Tenke, close to Kolwezi, when the accident happened.

It derailed at 11:50pm (2150 GMT) on March 10 at the village of Buyofwe, about 200km from Kolwezi, seven of its wagons plunging into ravines.

It was carrying several hundred stowaways at the time, said Manyonga Ndambo, speaking by phone from Lubumbashi.

On March 13, he said the track had been cleared but the wagons involved in the crash still had to be towed away.

People regularly jump rides on freight trains to travel across the vast country because of the lack of passenger trains and the difficulti­es of travelling by road.

Train derailment­s are common in the DRC, as are shipwrecks of overloaded boats on the country’s lakes and rivers.

According to a database maintained by AFP, last week’s accident was the deadliest in the world over the last two years, and the third worst accident in Africa over the last 10.

The last accident in DR Congo of this kind happened in 2014, when a good train on which several hundred people were travelling derailed at Katongola, in the southeast region of Kataga, killing 136 people.

Mutomb is expected back in Kinshasa on March 14 to report on the extent of the damage, the communicat­ions ministry said.

 ?? AFP ?? A train crash in southeaste­rn Democratic Republic of Congo has killed at least 75 people as investigat­ors look into the cause of the accident.
AFP A train crash in southeaste­rn Democratic Republic of Congo has killed at least 75 people as investigat­ors look into the cause of the accident.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia