More than 90 people have died after a ferry capsized off the coast of northern Mozambique, local authorities said.

More than 90 people have died after a ferry capsized off the coast of northern Mozambique, local authorities said.
Officials in Nampula province said five people have been rescued out of 130 people believed to be on board the ferry.
They were fleeing a cholera outbreak, Nampula provincial secretary Jaime Neto said. Many children are among the dead, he added.
“Because the ferry was full of many people and it was not suitable for carrying passengers, it ended up sinking,” said Neto.
The ferry was apparently traveling from Lunga to the island of Mozambique, off the coast of Nampula.
The region of Nampula has been one of the areas most affected by the cholera disease that has spread in several countries in southern Africa since January last year.
According to Unicef, the current outbreak is the worst in 25 years. Since October 2023, Mozambique has reported 13,700 confirmed cases and 30 deaths.
The Islamist insurgent group in the neighboring state of Cabo Delgado has killed nearly 4,000 people and displaced nearly a million people since it began its offensive six years ago.
For about 400 years, the island of Mozambique was the capital of Portuguese East Africa, while the region was under colonial rule.
The island is a UNESCO world heritage site for its colonial architecture and unique history as a trading hub.