
At least 20 students and one adult have been killed after a bus carrying pupils on a study trip crashed in eastern Uganda, local officials say, in one of the country's deadliest road accidents involving children in recent years.
Dozens of others, including staff, were injured in the crash in Kapchorwa district on Thursday evening.
Preliminary investigations suggest the bus had a mechanical fault before the driver lost control on Chekwatit Hill, a stretch of road that has been the site of several serious crashes, according to local officials.
As a result of the accident, all school educational trips have been cancelled until an investigation is complete, a state-run outlet is reporting.
"As an immediate precautionary measure, we must do something about the safety of our children," Education Minister John Chrysostom Muyingo is quoted by the New Vision news site as saying.
"The driver reportedly lost control of the vehicle, which veered off the road, struck a large stone along the roadside, and overturned," police said describing what had happened.
The bus, carrying pupils from King David Junior School in Ndejje, crashed at about 20:00 local time (17:00 GMT) at Chekwatit village.
"Sadly, 20 children and 1 adult, who happens to be the founder and director, Mr Tadeo Ssekade, have gone to be with the Lord," Local Government Minister Balaam Ateenyi Barugahara posted on X, while at the scene.
Videos shared by eyewitnesses showed the bus badly damaged, as local residents rushed to help the injured children.
The pupils were returning from a study tour, with local media reporting they had visited the Sipi Falls, a tourist area.
Uganda records thousands of road deaths every year, with speeding, poorly maintained vehicles and dangerous roads among the leading causes, according to traffic authorities.
The latest crash comes amid renewed concern over the safety of school transport after several serious bus accidents were reported in the country in recent weeks.
Source: BBC
-Agencies



















