The Herald (South Africa)

Ghana fuel site blast kills seven

- Kwasi Kpodo

AT least seven people were killed and dozens injured, mostly suffering burns, after a huge explosion at a fuel distributi­on site in Ghana’s capital, authoritie­s said yesterday.

The blast on Saturday evening was heard across much of the city, sending a giant fireball into the sky above the eastern part of Accra and causing frightened residents to flee their homes in large numbers. Others were forcibly evacuated.

At least seven people died and 132 were injured, a statement from the Ministry of Informatio­n read out on radio said yesterday.

About half of the injured had already been treated and discharged, it said.

The site includes a liquefied petroleum gas storage depot and two service stations run by stateowned GOIL and oil major Total.

Witnesses said people had already begun fleeing the area ahead of the blast because of the pungent odour of gas – a factor that likely reduced casualties. Neither Total nor GOIL responded to requests for comment.

Ghana, a relatively new oil and gas producer, has suffered several recent accidents, including an explosion in 2015 that killed about 100 people.

Like many teeming African cities, Accra’s infrastruc­ture has failed to keep up with its population, which has shot up to seven million.

At the scene of the fire yesterday, scattered fruit and broken coconuts from street vendors were strewn near the wreckage next to burnt-out cars and a fuel truck, a witness said.

Vice-President Mahamudu Bawumia described the accident as one too many and promised to toughen safety measures.

Several onlookers expressed anger that the government had not done more to prevent another fatal accident in the city.

“It’s annoying to see all the big men trooping to this place as if this is the first time we have such an incident,” minibus driver Joshua Vokeh, 38, said.

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