Cameroon’s President
Paul Biya on Sunday pledged to investigate the causes of a rail crash that
killed at least 75 people, as rescue workers scoured wreckage for more bodies.
The packed passenger
train carrying more than 1,400 people between the capital Yaounde and the
central African country’s port city of Douala derailed on Friday near the town
of Eseka, causing carriages to flip over at high speed.
Two days later, some
were still seeking news of friends and family members on hand-written lists of
passengers pinned up outside medical centres in the two cities. On Sunday, the
government appealed for additional blood donations to assist with the treatment
of some 600 people who suffered injuries.
“I have ordered an
in-depth inquiry into the causes of this accident,” Biya told state TV in
French on returning to Cameroon on Sunday afternoon after a trip in Europe.
“I have ordered for
victims’ (medical) costs to be paid for by the state,” he added.
Operator Camrail, a
unit of French industrial group Bollore, said on Sunday it had set up a special
train service to fetch bodies from the crash site.
Witnesses said that
before the crash extra carriages had been added to the train to accommodate
exceptionally high demand for the service, due partly to the collapse of a
portion of the main road linking the two cities after heavy rain.
It was not clear if
that had played a role in the accident.
Camrail said on Sunday
it had received permission from the command post managing the lines before
commencing its journey.
Technicians from the
firm have been made to help police with their enquiries and psychological
support is being offered to victims, the firm added.
“A crisis unit was
immediately created in the train stations of Yaounde and Douala,” Camrail’s
Hamadou Sali told reporters.
Several African leaders
including Senegal’s Macky Sall and Niger’s Mahamadou Issoufou expressed their
condolences on social media.
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