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22 children dead in Nile boat accident: Sudan media

22 children dead in Nile boat accident: Sudan media
Sudanese media said at least 22 children drowned while they were on their way to school after their boat sank in the country's Nile rive.
2 min read
15 August, 2018
The boat's engine failed while carrying children to school [Getty]
At least 22 children drowned on Wednesday when their boat sank in the Nile in Sudan while they were on their way to school, according to official media reports.

A woman also died when the vessel went down around 750 kilometres (470 miles) north of the capital Khartoum with more than 40 children on board, the SUNA news agency reported.

"The accident was caused by engine failure halfway across because of a strong current," it said.

The victims' bodies have not yet been found, SUNA added.

Villagers in the region rely on wooden boats to cross the Nile.

According to witness Ibrahim Hassan, at least nine children survived the ordeal.

SUNA said the small boat was overloaded, carrying about 30 sacks of sweet potatoes and 10 bags of grain in addition to the children and the woman, an employee at a local hospital. 

Another witness told AFP by telephone that the boat had been crossing the river against the current.

"All the families (in the area) are in mourning," said the witness, who did not want to be named.

Pictures purported to show the school children on the boat before the crash were posted on social media.

Closed schools 

In the deadliest Nile accident of its kind in Sudan, 50 students drowned in August 2000 when their wooden barge overturned 350 kilometres southeast of Khartoum.

In September 2014, 13 Sudanese drowned when a boat sank north of Khartoum.

The Nile, which is nearly 6,700 kilometres long, is formed by the convergence of the White Nile, which has its source in Lake Victoria, and the Blue Nile, which originates in Ethiopia's Lake Tana. 

The two rivers meet in Khartoum before the Nile crosses through Egypt to reach the Mediterranean. 

Water levels in the Nile rise every year during the rainy season in Ethiopia, and United Nations aid agencies regularly warn of floods in Sudan between July and November.

Heavy rains in Khartoum on Wednesday morning flooded the capital's streets and electricity was cut in most neighbourhoods.

Authorities in the capital announced the suspension of classes until the end of the Islamic holiday of Eid al-Adha on August 25.

In August 2013, floods killed 50 people, most of them in Khartoum. 

The floods, the most serious to hit the Sudanese capital in 25 years according to the UN, effected hundreds of thousands of people.

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