A Congolese source later told Xinhua News Agency that 22 soldiers had died in the crash, including three Congolese soldiers. The helicopter, a Russian-made Mil Mi-17 transport, was assigned to Operation Shujaa, a counterterrorism mission in the DRC, and had just dropped off a food consignment to troops, according to the Ugandan Monitor. The chopper reportedly struck a cluster of electrical power lines and plummeted from the sky on top of the soldiers collecting the food cargo.
However, a second Ugandan helicopter also crashed, although it was unclear from reports if the crash happened on Saturday or Tuesday. A Ugandan and a Congolese soldier were both killed in an accident at Fort Portal in the Kabarole border area in western Uganda. According to the Ugandan Monitor, the chopper was a Russian-built Mil Mi-24 attack chopper. A preliminary judgment by UPDF officials suggested faulty wiring might have been the cause of the cash, which occurred just moments after takeoff.