Death toll rises to 28 in Nigerian boat accident


  • The boat accident in Nigeria’s Niger State has now claimed the lives of 28 individuals, according to updates from emergency services on Monday. 
  • Communities have rallied together to support an intensified search for dozens who are still unaccounted for following the capsizing of a passenger boat.
  • The incident occurred Sunday morning when a boat, carrying over 100 villagers, primarily women and children, overturned in the Niger River. 

The death toll in the boat accident in north-central Nigeria’s Niger State has risen to 28, emergency services said Monday, as communities mobilized in support of an intensified search for dozens still missing after the passenger boat capsized.

The boat capsized along the Niger River on Sunday morning with more than 100 villagers, mostly women and children, aboard. They were traveling to their farmlands in the Gbajibo community, located 156 miles from the state capital Minna, the closest source of emergency response.

It took several hours before help could reach the community because of its remote location, and villagers nearby were on the lookout for bodies floating on the river, Niger State Emergency Management Agency spokesman Ibrahim Audu told The Associated Press.

Divers recovered four more bodies from the river by Monday morning with at least 40 passengers believed to be still missing, Audu said. Thirty had been rescued.

BOAT CAPSIZES IN NORTHERN NIGERIA, KILLING NEARLY 100 WEDDING GUESTS

Africa Fox News graphic

Residents have mobilized in a search of dozens who went missing after a Nigeria boat accident, where the death toll has risen to 28.  (Fox News)

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“Instruction has been passed across all the communities surrounding that place so that some of them will watch out (for bodies),” he said.

Niger Gov. Mohammed Umaru Bago described the accident as “shocking and sorrowful” and directed the state emergency services to assist those affected, according to a statement issued by his office. He reiterated the importance of using life jackets and avoiding overcrowded boats.

Concerns remained about the regular and deadly boat accidents in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country where a number of remote and riverine communities do not have access to good roads, leaving rivers as the only available means of transportation.

It is still not clear what caused the latest accident but emergency services personnel said it could be as a result of overloading, the condition of the boat or a hindrance of the boat’s movement along the water.

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