Dozens killed in DR Congo oil tanker collision

More than 50 people thought to be dead and 100 others injured after accident on busy highway

Dozens of people were killed and at  least 100 others suffered serious burns after an oil tanker collided with a vehicle on ahighway in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The accident occurred on the road linking the capital Kinshasa to the country's sole seaport at Matadi on the Atlantic Ocean.

Witnesses say the tanker truck collided with a bus and when the fuel began to leak, villagers rushed to collect it. A fire then broke out.

"We have counted 53 charred bodies," said Florian, a witness, speaking at the disaster site in the village of Mbuba, about 120 kilometres west of Kinshasa.

Seven others with burn injuries died at the Saint-Luc hospital in Kisantu, a nearby city, he said.

Atou Matabuana, interim governor of Kongo Central region, said earlier on Saturday that around 50 people had died and "100 people have suffered second degree burns".

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The health minister gave a lower death toll late on Saturday, saying around 20 people had died at the scene of the crash while four were declared dead on arrival in hospital.

A doctor at the Saint-Luc hospital said that they had taken in many patients "for the most part with second-degree burn injuries".

"We are trying to help them, we are trying to rehydrate them but sadly there are those who are dying," Doctor Tresor said.

"Two mobile clinics are evacuating the injured.

The UN's Okapi radio said the flames spread rapidly and engulfed nearby houses.

Another witness at the village, Blaise Matumona, said the accident happened early on Saturday and "many people died in the marketplace".

Acting governor Mr Matabuana said: "We have taken measures to take charge of all the victims."

But photographs on social media showed the injured being transported on motorbikes and private cars. A witness said he had not seen any ambulance at the site.

"No ambulance and no hospital worthy of its name in Kisantu. Preventing this kind of disaster, let's just not speak about it," the pro-democracy movement Lucha (Struggle for Change) said.

The UN mission in DRC, known by its French acronym MONUSCO, said it had sent nine ambulances to the spot to evacuate the injured.

As well as oil tankers, overloaded trucks carrying goods also regularly use this stretch of road.

Updated: October 07, 2018, 8:49 AM