The family of a Ugandan activist killed in an accident over the
summer at one of America's top national parks has filed a $270 million
(about Shs998 billion) wrongful death claim.
Esther Nakajjigo, 25,
was visiting Arches National Park in Utah with her French husband
Ludovic Michaud in mid-June when an unsecured gate swung into the road,
decapitating her as she sat in the passenger seat of their car.
The newlywed couple had travelled to the park to celebrate the one-year anniversary of their first date.
Michaud
is seeking $240 million in damages from the National Park Service,
while Nakajjigo's family is seeking $30 million, US media reported
Friday.
"For want of an $8.00 basic padlock, our world lost an
extraordinary warrior for good; a young woman influencer who was
destined to become our society's future Princess Diana, philanthropist
Melinda Gates or Oprah Winfrey," the claim, which is a precursor to a
lawsuit, stated.
In an interview carried by CBS4 television station
in Denver this week, Michaud, who lives in Colorado, said he still has
flashbacks of the accident and is "trying to figure out how to move
forward, how to wake up in the morning."
"What
he saw and experienced that day, I cannot even imagine," Deborah Chang,
an attorney representing Michaud and the Nakajjigo family, told local
media. "The end of the gate impaled the car like a lance, and literally
beheaded his newlywed bride right in front of him."
Nakajjigo had a huge following in her native Uganda and was involved with numerous philanthropic projects.
She was especially interested in reducing teenage pregnancy and created a reality television show to empower women.
She had come to the United States to further her education and met Michaud in June 2019 through a dating app.
The couple married in March and planned to throw a big wedding party in Uganda once the Covid-19 pandemic was over.
The National Park Service did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Friday, nor did Michaud's attorney.
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