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Lightning kills 5 schoolchildren in Cameroon

Associated Press / September 17, 2009

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YAOUNDE, Cameroon - A lightning bolt killed five children at their school in northwest Cameroon as they were preparing to begin the school day, a local doctor said yesterday.

Some 58 others were taken to a hospital near the small village of Bamali, which is some 285 miles northwest of the capital, Yaounde.

Dr. Kwazo Kedze, chief medical officer at the Ndop district hospital, said 34 children were still being treated for shock and other ailments yesterday.

“It happened at about 8:20 a.m., when the children were preparing to start studies,’’ said teacher Moses Kengong. “Some were on the verandah and others inside their classrooms, and some began crying ‘Please sir, help me, help me,’ shortly after the thunder strike.’’

Several witnesses, including a prominent traditional ruler, said they believed the event had mystical roots. Belief in witchcraft is common in the West African nation, and a thunderbolt is traditionally seen as a way of settling disputes.

“There’s something mystical about this incident,’’ Bamali traditional ruler Fon Idrissu Ndofoa told state-run Cameroon Radio Television yesterday.

Mountainous northwestern Cameroon has been deluged with floods and landslides in recent months with at least six people having been killed in the region.