The Province

‘WHERE IS MY SON?’

Fireball at illegal Mexico pipeline tap incinerate­s 73

- MARK STEVENSON

TLAHUELILP­AN, Mexico — Forensic experts attempted to separate and count charred heaps of corpses in central Mexico Saturday after a massive fireball erupted at an illegal pipeline tap, killing at least 73 people.

More than 74 other people were injured and dozens more were missing as relatives of the dead and onlookers gathered around the scene of carnage.

Just a few feet from where the pipeline passed through an alfalfa field, the dead seemed to have fallen in heaps, perhaps as they stumbled over each other or tried to help one another in the moments after a geyser of gasoline shot into the air Friday.

The leak was caused by an illegal pipeline tap in the small town of Tlahuelilp­an, about 100 kilometres north of Mexico City, according to state oil company Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex.

Video footage showed dozens of people in an almost festive atmosphere gathered in a field where a duct had been breached by fuel thieves.

Footage then showed flames shooting high into the air against a night sky and the pipeline ablaze.

Screaming people ran from the explosion, some burning and waving their arms.

On Saturday, several of the dead lay on their backs, their arms stretched out in agony.

Some seemed to have covered their chests in a last attempt to protect themselves from the flames; another few black-charred corpses seemed to embrace each other in death.

Lost shoes were scattered around the scorched field, as were plastic jugs and jerry cans that the victims had carried to gather spilling fuel.

“Ay, no, where is my son?” wailed Hugo Olvera Estrada, whose 13-year-old son, Hugo Olvera Bautista, was at the spot where the fire erupted.

Wrapped in a blanket outside a clinic, the man had already gone to six local hospitals looking for his child.

After returning home from middle school yesterday, his father said, the boy went to join the crowd scooping up gasoline.

Olvera Estrada believed he was influenced by older and supposedly wise men from the town of about 20,000.

“The older men brought him,” he said.

The tragedy came just three weeks after new President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador launched an offensive against fuel theft gangs that have drilled dangerous, illegal taps into pipelines an astounding 12,581 times in the first 10 months of 2018, an average of about 42 per day.

In an early morning press conference Saturday, Lopez Obrador vowed to continue the fight against the $3-billion-peryear illegal fuel theft industry.

“We are going to eradicate that which not only causes material damages, it is not only what the nation loses by this illegal trade, this black market of fuel, but the risk, the danger, the loss of human lives,” he said.

Lopez Obrador said the attorney general’s office will investigat­e whether the explosion was intentiona­l — caused by an individual or group — or whether the fireball occurred due to the inherent risk of clandestin­e fuel extraction.

He also called on townspeopl­e to give testimony not only about Friday’s events in Hidalgo state but about the entire black market chain.

 ?? — PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES ?? A group of forensic doctors works next to a pipeline that exploded in Tlahuelilp­an, Mexico. Below, flames shoot into the sky Friday night.
— PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES A group of forensic doctors works next to a pipeline that exploded in Tlahuelilp­an, Mexico. Below, flames shoot into the sky Friday night.
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 ??  ?? Forensic doctors gather the dead following the powerful blast of the PEMEX pipeline.
Forensic doctors gather the dead following the powerful blast of the PEMEX pipeline.
 ??  ?? Family members cry after recognizin­g a loved one’s body at the explosion site in Tlahuelilp­an, Mexico.
Family members cry after recognizin­g a loved one’s body at the explosion site in Tlahuelilp­an, Mexico.

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