33 killed in Tanzania
school bus crash....
Tanzania
is mourning the deaths of 30 students who were killed in a bus accident Sunday
in Karatu township in the Arusha region.
Two teachers and the bus driver
were also killed in the crash Saturday in the Rhotia area, about 150 kilometers
(92 miles) northeast of the popular tourist city of Arusha. Six students were
injured and one managed to walk away unharmed.
As the country mourns, political
rivals have managed to put aside their differences in a show of unity as
President John Magufuli and the main opposition party, Chadema, urged their
supporters to come together to grieve for the victims from the Lucky Vincent
Primary School who were headed to Karatu township for a study tour.
"This is a nation tragedy.
Its very sad and shocking to learn we lost our beloved 30 pupils, their
teachers and a driver in terrible road accident," Magufuli said in a
statement delivered via Arusha Regional Commissioner Mrisho Gambo.
He asked the parents of the
victims, relatives, friends and the entire country to remain calm during this
tough and difficult period as the government begins a probe into the crash.
Arusha District Commissioner
Gabriel Daqaro said the victims will be given a public national funeral Sunday
at the Sheikh Amri Abeid stadium in Arusha.
A top official in Chadema, John
Mrema, urged Tanzanians to "bury all differences" as the country
deals with the shock of the accident. "We should remain Tanzanian in such
kind of situation by holding one another hands," he said late Saturday.
Arusha Regional Police
Commissioner Charles Mkumbo told Anadolu Agency initial indications show the
driver may have lost control of the bus while speeding.
"The bus skidded off the road
and plunged into a river in the Rhotia area, a few kilometers before Karatu
town along the Arusha-Ngorongoro crater road," he said.
The school's deputy headmaster,
Longino Vincent, said 90 students were traveling to Karatu for a joint
examination with a sister school, Tumaini Primary in Karatu.
"They were in three different
cars -- two owned by our school and the other one which was involved in the
accident, was hired," he said. The other two buses were not involved in
the crash.
The crash Saturday is the latest
in Tanzania that has been plagued by accidents that have claimed the lives of
at least 82 students in recent decades.
At least 40 students were burned
alive in 1994 as they slept in a dormitory at the Shauritanga Secondary School
in the Kilimanjaro region.
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