AFRICA
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Over 100 killed after boat catches fire on Congo River
Search operations continued on Friday with naval personnel and community volunteers combing the banks
Over 100 killed after boat catches fire on Congo River
Accidents on waterways are common in DR Congo. / Reuters
3 hours ago

At least 107 people have died after a whaleboat caught fire in the west of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Reuters news agency reports quoting an internal government report.

The boat, a narrow, double-ended open vessel caught fire on the Congo River near Malange village in Lukolela territory on Thursday evening, leaving 146 people missing, the Ministry of Social Affairs said in the memo.

Rescue teams recovered 209 survivors, several with injuries, after the vessel burned and drifted downstream, the note said. The fire also destroyed cargo on board and ignited 15 riverside homes.

Search operations continued on Friday with naval personnel and community volunteers combing the banks while authorities pledged medical care for the injured, assistance to bereaved families and the repatriation of survivors to their places of origin and destination.

Main transport mode

River transport is a lifeline in Congo's vast rainforest regions, where wooden vessels are the main form of transport between villages, but accidents are frequent.

The accident comes days after at least 86 people died in a separate shipwreck on Wednesday night at the confluence of the Nsolo and Great Maringa rivers in Basankusu territory, northeast of Malange, after a river boat sank on Wednesday, Congo, state media reported Thursday adding that local residents pulled eight survivors from the water.

"The motorised canoe … sank due to blatant overloading and nighttime navigation, which is formally prohibited," civil society activist Akula Mboyo said in a statement.

Rescue operations are often hampered by limited resources and the remote locations of accident.

Reuters could not independently verify the death toll in Basankusu and officials were not immediately reachable for comment.

SOURCE:Reuters