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Tanzania ferry: Captain arrested, over 200 now dead

By Sommer Brokaw
A handout photo made available by the Tanzania Red Cross shows Red Cross volunteers during a rescue operation near Ukerewe island in Lake Victoria, Tanzania, Friday. Reports Saturday say the death toll has risen to 209 people. Photo by EPA-EFE/Tanzania Red Cross
A handout photo made available by the Tanzania Red Cross shows Red Cross volunteers during a rescue operation near Ukerewe island in Lake Victoria, Tanzania, Friday. Reports Saturday say the death toll has risen to 209 people. Photo by EPA-EFE/Tanzania Red Cross

Sept. 22 (UPI) -- The captain of an overcrowded ferry that capsized two days ago in Tanzania's Lake Victoria and killed more than 200 people has been arrested, officials said Saturday.

Two-hundred-nine people have died in the ferry disaster.

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The MV Nyerere ferry was preparing to dock with hundreds of people more than its 100-passenger capacity at Ukara Island in northern Mwanza Thursday afternoon when it tipped over and capsized. The vessel was carrying more than 400 when it capsized Thursday, officials said.

Tanzanian President John Magufuli said in a televised address Friday evening that the captain had left a person steering the wheel that had no formal training for the job, The Citizen reported said.

"The captain is already [in] Police custody," Magufuli said. "I have also ordered that all those responsible for the operations of the MV Nyerere vessel be arrested for questioning."

Initial reports indicated the cause of the incident was overloading, Magufuli added, but a committee is being formed to provide more details.

Tanzania has seen a number of other ship disasters where overcrowding played a role.

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In 2012, at least 145 people died when an overcrowded ferry sank while transporting people to the island of Zanzibar in the Indian Ocean and almost 200 people died in another shipwreck off the coast of Zanzibar the year before. In one of the worst disasters, nearly 900 people died in 1996 when the MV Bukoba capsized on Lake Victoria.

Transport Minister Isack Kamwele said 40 survivors were rescued Friday and 40 others were saved Thursday.

"It's been a bit difficult because of the fact that the ferry overturned with people and luggage," Kamwele said. "We have to remove the luggage first to get to the bodies."

Rescuers are still searching to recover more bodies.

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