The Borneo Post

15 killed in Russian explosives factory blaze, one missing

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MOSCOW: Fifteen people died and one person was missing after a fire broke out at a Russian explosives factory southeast of Moscow on Friday, authoritie­s said.

The government of the Ryazan region, where the factory is based, said they had died in the factory blaze in the village of Lesnoye, 300 kilometres from the capital.

“The fate of one person remains unknown,” it said in a statement.

One more person was hospitalis­ed with “major burns” and is in a “serious condition”, it added.

The emergencie­s ministry published images showing smoke and debris at the severely damaged factory building.

Earlier it said the fire could have broken out as a result of “violations of technologi­cal processes and safety measures” at the local PGUP Elastic factory

The plant is considered a “strategic company” by the Russian government.

According to its website, it belongs to state conglomera­te Rostec which brings together a range of companies supplying industrial or high-tech products to civilian and military sectors.

But local media said it went bankrupt in 2015 and that its workshops were used by other companies of the explosives sector.

Firefighte­rs first received a report that a fire had broken out at the plant at 08:22 local time, the emergencie­s ministry said.

It dispatched its acting head Alexander Chupriyan to the site. He is in charge of the ministry after its chief Yevgeny Zinichev died falling off a cliff during Arctic exercises last month.

Russia’s Investigat­ive Committee, which probes serious crimes, said it had sent detectives to probe if the factory had complied with “industrial safety levels”.

More than 170 rescuers were working in the area, it added.

The head of the local administra­tion earlier told the TASS news agency that 17 people were inside the plant’s workshop at the time of the fire.

Authoritie­s said the blaze – which covered an area of 160 square meters – had been put out and did not pose a danger to locals.

Amateur video footage on Russian social media showed rows of fire trucks at the scene with burning debris in a wooded area by the factory.

Accidental fires are common in Russia, where hundreds of blazes are recorded each year due to ageing and dilapidate­d infrastruc­ture and non-compliance with safety standards that are often lax. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Firefighte­rs working to put out a fire at a gunpowder and chemicals plant in Ryazan Region.
— AFP photo Firefighte­rs working to put out a fire at a gunpowder and chemicals plant in Ryazan Region.

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