Business Day

Oil tanker in deadly inferno

• Explosion kills more than 140 as hundreds from poor Pakistani villages collect spilled commodity on highway

- /AFP (See Page 5)

An oil tanker crashed and exploded on a road in Pakistan on Sunday, killing 146 people, many of whom were collecting leaking fuel before it ignited, government officials and rescue workers said.

The speeding tanker overturned on a sharp bend on a highway on the outskirts of the city of Bahawalpur. The driver lost control when the vehicle blew a tyre, a provincial government spokesman said.

A large crowd of people gathered, many to collect fuel in containers, and the tanker exploded in a huge fireball about 45 minutes later. Rescue workers said that about 80 people had been injured.

“People of the area and passersby had started gathering fuel when it exploded, burning everybody,” provincial government spokesman Malik Muhammad Ahmed Khan said.

An estimated 20 children were among the dead, he said.

The accident happened the day before Pakistan celebrates the Eid al-Fitr festival, when families get together to celebrate the end of the fasting month of Ramadan.

Many bodies were burned beyond recognitio­n and television pictures showed piles of burnt-out motorcycle­s, apparently those of people who were collecting fuel.

Police had tried to clear the area before the tanker exploded, but people ignored them, Khan said, adding that the initial crash had blocked the road, causing a traffic tailback.

The driver of the tanker survived the accident and was taken into police custody, he said.

The explosion took place on a stretch of highway cutting through the village of Ramzan Joya, near Bahawalpur.

Khalil Ahmed, a 57-year-old former government employee who lives in the village, said he had lost 12 relatives in the fire, which firefighte­rs extinguish­ed in two hours.

AFTER THE SPILL, PEOPLE BEGAN CALLING THEIR RELATIVES TO COME AND GATHER THE OIL

“One body has been recovered and 11 others are still missing,” Ahmed said.

“After the spill, people began calling their relatives to come and gather the oil, and some showed up from nearby villages as well. There must have been 500 people gathered when the fire began.”

Oil is a precious commodity for villagers in Pakistan, where more than 60% of the population survives on around $3 a day or less, according to a World Bank survey.

“People were collecting oil in bottles, cans and household utensils. We tried to get them to move back before the fire started, but no one was listening,” Ahmed said.

He estimates that about 100 people from the small hamlet are missing.

“The day of judgment has arrived for our village,” he said.

About 50 people were killed in bomb attacks in Pakistan on Friday, but there was no suggestion of an attack on Sunday.

“According to initial reports, somebody tried to light a cigarette,” said rescue services spokesman Jam Sajjad Hussain.

About 40 people with serious burns were airlifted to hospitals in nearby Multan.

 ??  ?? Inferno: Pakistani soldiers stand guard beside burnt-out vehicles at the scene where an oil tanker caught fire following an accident on a highway near the town of Ahmedpur East, about 670km from Islamabad, on Sunday. At least 140 people were killed.
Inferno: Pakistani soldiers stand guard beside burnt-out vehicles at the scene where an oil tanker caught fire following an accident on a highway near the town of Ahmedpur East, about 670km from Islamabad, on Sunday. At least 140 people were killed.
 ?? /Reuters ?? The fast is over: People attend Eid al-Fitr prayers to mark the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan in a park in Peshawar, Pakistan. Sunday’s oil tanker disaster on the outskirts of the city of Bahawalpur, Pakistan, happened as many prepared to end Ramadan.
/Reuters The fast is over: People attend Eid al-Fitr prayers to mark the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan in a park in Peshawar, Pakistan. Sunday’s oil tanker disaster on the outskirts of the city of Bahawalpur, Pakistan, happened as many prepared to end Ramadan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa