The Philippine Star

15 dead in Indonesia fuel depot fire

16 still missing

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JAKARTA (AP) – Indonesian rescuers and firefighte­rs yesterday searched for possible victims under the rubble of charred houses and buildings after a fire broke out at a fuel storage depot in the capital, killing at least 15 people and leaving 16 others missing.

The Plumpang fuel storage station, operated by state-run oil and gas company Pertamina, is near a densely populated area in the Tanah Merah neighborho­od in North Jakarta. It supplies 25 percent of Indonesia’s fuel needs.

At least 260 firefighte­rs and 52 fire engines managed to extinguish the blaze just before midnight on Friday after a fire spread through the neighborho­od for more than two hours, fire officials said. They were working to secure the area yesterday.

Video of the fire broadcast on television late Friday showed hundreds of people in the community running in panic while thick plumes of black smoke and orange flames filled the sky and firefighte­rs battled the blaze.

A preliminar­y investigat­ion showed the fire broke out when a pipeline ruptured during heavy rain, possibly from a lightning strike, said Eko Kristiawan, Pertamina’s area manager for the western part of Java.

Residents living near the depot said they smelled a strong odor of gasoline, causing some people to vomit, after which thunder rumbled twice, followed by a huge explosion around 8 p.m.

Data from the Indonesian Red Cross’ command center said the death toll had been revised to 15 from 17 after authoritie­s found that some victims were counted twice. Rescuers continued searching for 16 people who were reported missing or separated from their families amid the chaos. About 49 people were receiving treatment in five hospitals, some of them in critical condition.

Acting Jakarta Governor Heru Budi Hartono said about 600 displaced people were being taken to temporary shelters at government offices, a Red Cross command post and a sport stadium.

 ?? AP ?? A boy stands in the remains of a burnt house in a residentia­l area in Plumpang, north Jakarta yesterday, after a fire at a nearby state-run fuel storage depot run by energy firm Pertamina.
AP A boy stands in the remains of a burnt house in a residentia­l area in Plumpang, north Jakarta yesterday, after a fire at a nearby state-run fuel storage depot run by energy firm Pertamina.

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