About 120 feared dead in Ghana boat capsize: police

ReutersReuters

Apr 10, 2006 — By Orla Ryan

ACCRA (Reuters) - About 120 people were feared drowned after a boat
packed with passengers and goods capsized on Ghana's Lake Volta, one
of the world's largest reservoirs, police in the West African country
said on Monday.

"There were 150 passengers on board but only 30 have been rescued. The
rest are feared dead," police spokesman Kwesi Ofori said. He said the
accident happened on Saturday and a search party was still looking for
survivors.

"Police, fishermen and the fire service are involved in the search,"
he said.

Ofori said the boat was probably overloaded. He said it hit a stump as
it traveled across the lake, which covers 8,500 square km (3,275
square miles), more than three times the size of Luxembourg.

He said the boat had been traveling from Dudzome, in the Afram Plains
region, to Abotoase further east. The bodies of three young children
had been recovered from the accident site.

Local media reported that the passengers were being moved after
settling illegally in a forestry reserve in Dudzome and had been
forced with their property and livestock onto a boat that should carry
only 70 people.

Local politicians contacted by Reuters said they were on the way to
the accident site to ascertain why the vessel had been overloaded.

The lake's dam produces electricity for most of the West African
nation of 22 million people. The lake was formed in 1957, as the
former British colony became the first country in sub-Saharan Africa
to gain independence.

Many of the vessels plying trade and passenger routes on lakes and off
Africa's shores are poorly maintained, with accurate passenger
manifests a rarity.

An overloaded wooden boat carrying three times the number of
passengers it was built for sank off Djibouti last week, killing at
least 109 people in one of the Red Sea nation's worst disasters.

At least 127 people drowned last month after a wooden boat traveling
from Nigeria to Gabon broke up in high seas and sank off Cameroon's
Atlantic port of Kribi. Survivors said more than twice the registered
150 passengers had been onboard.

Africa's worst shipping disaster in several years took place in
February off Egypt, when 1,026 people died when a ferry sank on its
way to Safaga from Saudi Arabia. There were 388 survivors.

http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=1826641



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