
Calabar: Only two survivors have been found so far after a boat capsized
off Nigeria with an estimated 128 people on board, emergency officials said on
Wednesday.
"One hundred twenty-eight people were suspected to be aboard the
boat, but only nine bodies have been recovered, while there were two survivors
so far," Yushau Shuaib, spokesman for the National Emergency Management
Agency, told AFP.
He said the sinking occurred about two or three days ago about 40 miles
(60 kilometres) off the coast of the southern city of Calabar, but that there
was still some confusion about the origin of the boat.
There were indications that the boat had originated from
Congo-Brazzaville, but that has not been confirmed, he said, without giving
further details.
Such accidents at sea occur regularly in parts of Africa, with rickety
boats often overloaded with passengers and few reliable records of who was
aboard.
A rescue source speaking on condition of anonymity said initial
indications were that the two survivors were Togolese.
A spokesman for the emergency management agency in Cross River state,
where Calabar is located, said the wreckage of the boat had not yet been
located.
The survivors were rescued by a patrol team from Addax Petroleum, a
Chinese company which has operations in the oil-rich country, the spokesman
David Akate said.
The survivors are "yet to be stabilised," he said, but could
not give further specifics on their condition.
Akate also said the boat had an estimated 128 passengers and that nine
bodies had been recovered.
"We are still collating information on the mishap because it
happened on the high seas," he said.
"We have not been able to get information as to where the boat
took off from, where it was going and the type of boat. The accident happened
at the weekend and the rescue operation started on Sunday."
In July 2012, a ferry sank in choppy waters as it crossed from mainland
Tanzania to the island of Zanzibar, leaving at least 104 people drowned.
Zanzibar authorities charged three people with manslaughter over the sinking of
the MV Skagit, including the ship's owner and captain.
In September 2011, more than 200 people perished when the MV Spice
Islander, which the authorities admitted was overloaded, sank while sailing
between two of the main islands in the Zanzibar archipelago. Rescue workers
saved 619 passengers.
At least 50 people drowned and some 35 were reported missing after a
boat accident on a river in the northwest of the Democratic Republic of Congo
in July 2011.
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