KAMPALA, July 17 (Reuters) – Twenty schoolchildren died when the bus carrying them crashed on the way back from a trip to some waterfalls in eastern Uganda late on Thursday, authorities said.
The government said on Friday it was banning all school excursions as the tragedy prompted outpourings of grief and online posts demanding better safety standards.
Preliminary investigations suggested the driver lost control, and the bus veered off the road and turned over after hitting a large stone, police said in a post on X.
The bus, owned by King David Junior School in the capital Kampala, was returning from an educational visit to Sipi Falls, and crashed at Chekwatit village in Kapchorwa district, police added.
One adult also died, and three adults and several children were injured, officials said.
Road accidents are common in Uganda, with experts often blaming poorly maintained vehicles and a lack of street lighting.
In October last year, 46 people died in a bus crash on one of the country’s main highways between the capital and the northern city of Gulu.
Education Minister Chrysostom Muyingo had “put a hold on all school trips and excursions, effective immediately and until further notice,” a government communications agency said on Friday.
(Reporting by Elias Biryabarema; Writing by Vincent Mumo Nzilani; Editing by Alexander Winning and Andrew Heavens)





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