Our website use cookies to improve and personalize your experience and to display advertisements (if any). Our website may also include cookies from third parties like Google Adsense, Google Analytics, and Youtube. By using the website, you consent to the use of cookies.

Uganda student massacre: parents submit DNA samples

PARENTS of students missing after an attack on a school in western Uganda are flocking to the local police station to submit DNA samples that could identify their children among the 42 bodies that have been recovered.

One of Uganda’s biggest massacres in recent decades occurred Friday night at Lhubirira Secondary School. Assailants set a dormitory full of boys alight, then attacked a dormitory full of girls, hacking victims to death with machetes and knives.

Six students were also abducted by the attackers, who the authorities say were fighters from an Islamic State-affiliated group based across the border in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.

Regional police commander Tai Ramadhan said many of the dead bodies were charred beyond recognition, forcing investigators to use DNA samples from relatives to try to identify them.

DATELINE BERLIN: Updates from the South African Special Olympics camp

Simon Kule, who had come to Bwera Police Station to give a DNA sample, was still looking for his son, Philmon Mumbere.

“So they should help us to know – either these people are still there or they are in the mortuary so that we should prepare in time.”

Solomon Mulekya was looking for his daughter, Trephine Kaghuo.

“We are not happy, because we have lost our children,” he said. “I’m there in suspense, whether the rebels they have taken her or we don’t know they killed her along the way.”

READ:  IS-allied rebel group commander charged with murder of honeymooning tourists

Authorities said on Monday that 20 suspected “collaborators” of the attackers, including the school’s head teacher, had been detained for questioning.

By The African Mirror

MORE FROM THIS SECTION