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24 dead in Uganda landfill collapse as rescuers find more victims
August 12, 2024
Article Body TextKAMPALA — <p>The death toll from a mountain of rubbish that collapsed in the Ugandan capital rose to 24 on Monday as rescuers with excavators continued searching for victims, according to the city authority.</p> <p>At least four children are among those killed by the collapse at the Kiteezi landfill Friday, police told reporters.</p> <p>The collapse is believed to have been triggered by heavy rainfall. The precise details of what happened were unclear, but the city authority said there was a “structural failure in waste mass.”</p> <p>Irene Nakasiita, a spokesperson for the Uganda Red Cross, said there was no hope of rescuing more people alive.</p> <p>It was not clear how many people were unaccounted for. The Kiteezi landfill is a vast rubbish dumpsite in an impoverished hillside area that receives hundreds of garbage trucks daily. The city authority has been aiming to decommission it since declaring it full years ago. </p> <p>It's also a kind of no-man's land in the city of 3 million, attractive to women and children who scavenge plastic waste they aim to sell. Others have built permanent homes nearby.</p> <p>Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni ordered an investigation into the disaster, asking in a series of posts on the social platform X, formerly Twitter, why people were living in close proximity to an unstable heap of garbage.</p> <p>“Who allowed people to live near such a potentially hazardous and dangerous heap?” Museveni said, adding that effluent or liquid waste from the site is hazardous enough that people should not be living there. </p>
Content TypeText
LanguageEnglish
NewsML Media TopicsArts, Culture, Entertainment and Media
Subtitles / Dubbing AvailableNo
NetworkVOA
Embargo DateAugust 12, 2024 18:50 EDT
BylineAssociated Press
Brand / Language ServiceVoice of America - English