The death toll in a train crash in southeastern Democratic Republic of Congo has been revised upward to 75, with 125 injured. The accident happened on Thursday night when a freight service train derailed.
The new toll came from the head of the state railway company, Fabien Mutomb, after he visited the site with a team assembled to investigate the disaster. He gave a toll of 60 men, women and children killed and 52 injured in the accident.
Among those injured, 28 were in a critical condition. On Saturday, the SNCC‘s director of infrastructure, Marc Manyonga Ndambo, said 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 11:50 pm (2150 GMT) Thursday at the village of Buyofwe, about 200 kilometers (125 miles) 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 Sunday, he said the track was cleared earlier in the day.
People regularly jump rides on freight trains to travel across the vast country because of the lack of passenger trains and the difficulties of traveling by road.
Mutomb is expected back in Kinshasa on Monday to report on the extent of the damage, the communications ministry said.