Global Times

World: 139 dead in Pakistan oil tanker fire

Crowds scavenging for fuel ignored warnings

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An overturned oil tanker explode dina huge fire ball in Pakistan Sunday, killing at least 139 people and injuring scores as crowds scavenging for fuel ignored warnings to stay clear, officials and witnesses said.

The horrific early morning tragedy came hours before Pakistan was due to begin Eid al- Fitr celebratio­ns marking the end of the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan.

The tanker carrying 40,000 liters of fuel overturned on a main highway while traveling from Karachi to Lahore, near the town of Ahmedpur East in Punjab province.

Details were sketchy but some witnesses suggested the tanker had suffered a burst tyre, said regional police chief Raja Riff at.

“When it turned over the residents of the nearby village of Ramzanpur Joya rushed to the site with buckets and other containers, and a large number of people on motorcycle­s also came and started collecting the spilling fuel,” Riff at told AFP.

“After about 10 minutes the tanker exploded in a huge fireball and enveloped the people collecting petrol. It was not clear how the fire started .”

Residents could be seen walking past blackened and twisted bodies piled by the roadside. Earlier, television footage showed shooting fl ames and a thick plume of smoke as firefighte­rs battled to extinguish the blaze.

The charred wreckage of dozens of motorcycle­s and cars was scattered on the highway, along with kitchen utensils, pots, water coolers, jerrycans and buckets which victims had brought to collect the petrol.

Dozens of villagers and relatives of victims looked on from nearby farmland, many of them weeping.

“What kind of ill- fated day is today?” one woman asked tearfully. Villagers told AFP that many of the victims had been related to each other.

Hafiz So hail told AFP his uncle and cousin were among the victims. “Everyone in the family and the village is deeply shocked. Nobody is able to explain what just happened,” Sohail told AFP.

“It was all fire everywhere I saw. For quite some time I was unable to understand what was going on.”

Muhammad Shabbir, another villager, said the driver was shouting for people to stay away because the petrol could explode at any time, but no one listened. “What is the use of this petrol, what will you do it with now?” he asked, pointing at a bucket in his other hand.

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