The death toll from a boat that capsized in Lake Albert Monday rose to 108 after 82 more bodies were recovered.
Ugandan
police said the boat was carrying more than 150 Congolese refugees, who
were escaping from Kyangwali refugee camp in western Uganda. They were
returning to DR Congo after a recent improvement in the security
situation in the country when the boat capsized.
On
Saturday, local fishermen rescued 45 boat passengers from the lake on
the border between Uganda and DR Congo, but hopes of finding more
survivors were running low, even as Uganda police, marine officials and
army joined in the search.
Survivors said they had
clung onto the edges of the boat until they were rescued. Others held
onto the cargo that had also been in the boat.
“So far,
the bodies retrieved from the waters today are 82 and on Sunday evening
we found seven bodies, which indicates that the boat was really
over-loaded,” John Elatu Ojokuna, the area police commander, said on
Monday. Nineteen bodies were found on Saturday.
Preliminary
reports indicate that the hand-built boat did not have life jackets and
there was no emergency response to the disaster save for the efforts of
local fishermen. Police said they had arrested the boat’s coxswain to
assist them with investigations. Some survivors said the coxswain had
been sipping from sachets of gin before the boat capsized.
The
Ntoroko District Police Commander, Mr Bosco Bakashaba, told journalists
that some of the bodies were found floating in the lake, which forms a
natural border between Uganda and the DR Congo.
“More bodies may be discovered since the search is still on-going,” he said.
As
the search for survivors and bodies continued, Ugandan authorities were
investigating the circumstances under which the refugees had sneaked
out of their camp and travelled to the lake without permission or
detection.
Preliminary investigations indicated that
over 100 refugees walked more than 10 kilometres from the Kyangwali
camp, descended the Albertine escarpment that forms part of the western
arm of the East African Great Rift Valley, to the banks of the lake at
Senjojo landing site.
It is believed that they walked through the night to avoid detection.
Mr
David Kazungu, the commissioner in charge of refugees in the Office of
the Prime Minister, said the Ugandan government had not approved the
refugees’ travel.
“They escaped from Kyangwali refugee resettlement,” he said.
“They escaped from Kyangwali refugee resettlement,” he said.
Hundreds
of residents escaped from Kamango area in eastern DR Congo last
December and took refuge in Uganda after fighting broke out between
government troops backed by UN peacekeepers and rebel groups in the
area.
The refugees initially settled in Bundibugyo
District close to the border before the Ugandan government and the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees moved them further inwards
to the settlement camp where they were given land to build shelter and
grow crops.
Mr Kazungu said many refugees have sneaked
back to DR Congo after the defeat of the M23 rebel group — the most
dominant in the area in recent years. Some of them are believed to have
sneaked back across the same lake.
“Over 1,000 refugees
are reported to have returned to their home this way and reported to
authorities in DRC,” he said. The camp they escaped from hosts over
20,000 Congolese refugees.
Arrangements were underway
to transport the bodies to DR Congo for burial. Ugandan police were
holding the 45 survivors for their own safety.
Some of the refugees were returning to DR Congo to harvest crops they left in their farms, area residents said.
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