Arab News

Pakistan orders Shell to pay at least $2.4m after tanker fire

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Friday ordered Shell Pakistan to pay at least $2.4 million in compensati­on after more than 200 people were killed when one of its tankers overturned and exploded in a devastatin­g inferno last month.

The tanker contracted by Royal Dutch Shell’s local subsidiary crashed on a main highway in central Punjab province while carrying some 50,000 liters of fuel from Karachi to Lahore on June 25.

It exploded minutes later, sending a fireball through crowds from a nearby village who had gathered to scavenge for the spilled fuel, despite warnings by the driver and police to stay away.

Health officials and police Friday put the death toll, which has continued to rise since the accident, at 218 people and said 38 victims were still in hospital, some in critical condition.

“OGRA (the Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority) has found Shell Pakistan responsibl­e for the oil tanker incident and imposed a fine of 10 million rupees ($100,000) on it,” authority spokesman Imran Ghaznavi told AFP.

UN sanctions on militant

group welcomed Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry has praised the UN for imposing sanctions on a splinter group of the Pakistani Taliban, which is linked to deadly attacks in the country.

In a statement Friday, the ministry welcomed the move in which the UN Security Council on Thursday added the Jamaat-ul-Ahrar group to a list of organizati­ons and individual­s subject to the freezing of assets, a travel ban and an arms embargo. The ministry said the UN took this step at Islamabad’s request.

Pakistan often claims that Jamaat-ul-Ahrar operates from neighborin­g Afghanista­n. It imposed a ban on the group last year and launched a crackdown to trace and arrest its leadership.

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