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Tanzania pays tearful tribute to plane crash victims

Soldiers carry the casket of a victim, after a passenger plane plunged into Lake Victoria, at the Kaitaba Stadium in Bukoba on November 7, 2022, during a ceremony to hand over the bodies of the victims to their families.

What you need to know:

  • 24 survivors were rescued to safety out of the 43 people who were aboard flight PW 494, with investigators from Precision Air and the Tanzania Airports Authority arriving on the scene.

Bukoba. Grieving Tanzanians on Monday November 7, paid emotional tribute to 19 people who died when a passenger plane plunged into Lake Victoria in the country's deadliest air crash in decades.

Caskets of victims of a passenger plane plunged that plunged into Lake Victoria are seen at the Kaitaba Stadium in Bukoba on November 7, 2022, during a ceremony to hand over the bodies of the victims to their families. PHOTO | AFP

The Precision Air flight from Dar es Salaam crashed on Sunday morning while trying to land in Bukoba.

Police blamed bad weather for the accident.

Prime Minister Kassim Majaliwa was among hundreds of people who gathered at Kaitaba Stadium in Bukoba, with Muslim and Christian clerics leading prayers for the dead as onlookers wiped away tears.

Prime Minister, Kassim Majaliwa pays respect to the bodies of 19 people who lost their lives in the Precision Air plane crash on November 6, 2022

The ceremony to hand over the bodies of the victims to their families was expected to take hours, with broadcasters running live telecasts from the stadium in Kagera.


Relatives of the 19 people who died in the Precision Air plane crash in Lake Victoria yesterday. They paid their final respects to their loved ones on Monday November 7, at the funeral service which was held at the Kaitaba Stadium, Bukoba.

Twenty-four survivors were rescued to safety out of the 43 people who were aboard flight PW 494, with investigators from Precision Air and the Tanzania Airports Authority arriving on the scene.

Precision Air, a publicly listed company and Tanzania's largest private carrier, said the aircraft was an ATR 42-500, manufactured by Toulouse-based Franco-Italian firm ATR, and had 39 passengers -- including an infant -- and four crew members on board.

 The plane was  largely submerged on Sunday as rescuers, including fishermen, waded through water to bring people to safety.

Soldiers carry the casket of a victim, after a passenger plane plunged into Lake Victoria, at the Kaitaba Stadium in Bukoba on November 7, 2022, during a ceremony to hand over the bodies of the victims to their families.

Emergency workers attempted to lift the aircraft out of the water using ropes, assisted by cranes as residents also sought to help.

During the ceremony, Kagera regional commissioner Albert Chalamila singled out the "great role" played by volunteers, giving Sh1 million to a fisherman who was hospitalised after sustaining injuries during the rescue effort.

President Samia Suluhu Hassan on Monday also hailed emergency workers and volunteers for acting quickly to save lives.

"I congratulate those who participated in the rescue, including the people of Bukoba," she said on Twitter.

"I pray for the deceased to rest in peace and for the injured to recover quickly."


Anger over rescue effort

The accident has sparked anger among many Tanzanians over the government's handling of the rescue effort.

"We will... improve the government response to such accidents in partnership with the private sector," Defence Minister Innocent Bashungwa said at the ceremony.

"The accident investigations are still ongoing and I would like to ask the public to remain calm for now," Transport Minister Makame Mbarawa added.

Precision Air, which is partly owned by Kenya Airways, was founded in 1993 and operates domestic and regional flights as well as private charters to popular tourist destinations such as Serengeti National Park and the Zanzibar archipelago.

The accident comes five years after 11 people died when a plane belonging to safari company Coastal Aviation crashed in northern Tanzania.

In 1999, a dozen people, including 10 US tourists, died in a plane crash in northern Tanzania while flying between Serengeti National Park and Kilimanjaro airport.