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News ID: 111078
Publish Date : 08 January 2023 - 21:52

Dozens Killed, Injured in Road Accidents in Senegal, Uganda

DAKAR (AFP/Al Jazeera) – At least 40 people have been killed and 87 injured after two buses collided near Kaffrine in central Senegal.
The accident took place on the Number 1 national road at 3:15am (03:15 GMT) on Sunday.
President Macky Sall said 40 people were killed in the “grave” accident and announced three days of national mourning.
The bus, with a 60-seat capacity, was heading to Rosso near the border with Mauritania, the fire brigade said, adding that the number of people onboard was unknown.
“It was a serious accident,” Colonel Cheikh Fall, head of operations at the National Fire Brigade, told AFP news agency, adding that 87 people were injured in the incident.
Victims were taken to a hospital and medical centre in Kaffrine, he said. The wreckage and demolished buses have since been cleared and normal traffic has resumed, said Fall.
Public prosecutor, Cheikh Dieng, said early investigations suggested that the accident happened when “a bus assigned to the public transport of passengers, following the bursting of a tire, left its trajectory before colliding head-on with another bus coming in the opposite direction”.
“I am deeply saddened by the tragic road accident,” President Sall said on Twitter. “I extend my heartfelt condolences to the families of the victims and wish a speedy recovery to the injured,” he added.
This is one of the heaviest death tolls from a single incident in recent years in a country where road accidents are common largely because of a lack of driver discipline, poor roads and decrepit vehicles, according to experts.
In October 2020, at least 16 people were killed and 15 more injured when a bus collided with a refrigerated lorry in western Senegal. Local media said at the time that the lorry was hauling fish to Dakar.
In a separate accident, at least 21 people were killed and 49 others injured when a bus heading for the Kenyan capital Nairobi crashed shortly after crossing the border from Uganda, police said on Sunday, the latest in a recent spate of deadly road accidents.
Ugandan regional police spokesman Rogers Taitika told the AFP news agency that most of those killed were of Kenyan nationality and eight Ugandans were killed.
The bus was travelling from the eastern Ugandan city of Mbale to Nairobi and crashed in the Kenyan town of Lwakhakha, just across the border from a Ugandan town of the same name late on Saturday.
Taitika said that the driver had apparently lost control, sending the vehicle veering off the road.
“Preliminary findings point to a case of over-speeding by the bus driver,” he added.
The Ugandan government is planning to issue new measures to try to improve road safety after a surge in accidents in the East African country in recent days.
On January 6, a passenger bus rammed into a stationary truck near the northern Ugandan city of Gulu, killing 16 people.