Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lebanon fuel explosion fatal to at least 20 people

- BASSEM MROUE AND ZEINA KARAM

BEIRUT — A warehouse where fuel was illegally stored exploded in northern Lebanon early Sunday, killing 20 people and burning dozens more in the latest disaster to hit the Mediterran­ean country in the throes of a devastatin­g economic and political crisis.

It was not immediatel­y clear what caused the explosion near the border with Syria. Fuel smuggling operations have been ongoing for months.

The Lebanese Red Cross reported a fuel tanker exploded and its teams recovered 20 bodies from the site in the border village of Tleil.

A statement read it evacuated 79 people who were injured or suffered burns in the blast. Hours after the blast, Lebanese Red Cross members were still searching the area for more victims as Lebanese soldiers cordoned off the area.

A Lebanese military official said the explosion occurred after the army confiscate­d a warehouse in Tleil where about 15,800 gallons of gasoline were stored, and the order was given to distribute the fuel to residents of the area. Residents had gathered to acquire the scarce commodity, available only on the black market at exorbitant prices or not at all.

It was not clear what caused it, the official said. He spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulation­s.

Outside the Salam hospital in the northern city of Tripoli, a woman collapsed after she was told her son died of his wounds.

“Oh my God. He has little kids,” said the woman as she wept. “Why did you leave me, Ahmad?”

A young man standing nearby cried: “We will go to your homes and burn you there,” a reference to Lebanon’s political leaders, blamed for decades of corruption and mismanagem­ent that has led the country to bankruptcy.

At a hospital in Beirut, where some of the burn victims were brought, Marwa elSheikh from Tleil was waiting for word about her brother who was being treated for burns, and her brother-in-law, a retired soldier, who was still missing.

“Some people were burned beyond recognitio­n,” she told the Associated Press. “They are the victims of the shortcomin­gs and carelessne­ss of our politician­s who led us to this.”

A video circulatin­g online showed residents gathered at the site before the explosion, filling up containers with fuel.

AP footage showed the charred remains of what appears to be part of a tanker that exploded. Lebanese soldiers, a Red Cross vehicle and other trucks could be seen in the area.

Hospitals in northern Lebanon were calling for blood donations of all types. Lebanese Health Minister Hamad Hassan called on hospitals in northern Lebanon and the capital, Beirut, to receive those injured by the explosion, adding that the government will pay for their treatment.

The explosion comes as Lebanon faces a severe fuel shortage that has been blamed on smuggling, hoarding and the cash-strapped government’s inability to secure deliveries of imported fuel.

The shortages have paralyzed the country long dependent on private generators to light homes. Most of those generators have now turned off their engines because of the crippling fuel shortages that have also affected hospitals with critically ill patients.

Tleil is about 2½ miles from the Syrian border, but it was not immediatel­y clear if the fuel in the tanker was being prepared to be smuggled to Syria, where prices are much higher than in Lebanon.

The fuel crisis deteriorat­ed dramatical­ly this week after the central bank decided to end subsidies for fuel products — a decision that will likely lead to price hikes of almost all commoditie­s in Lebanon, already in the throes of soaring poverty and hyperinfla­tion.

Sunday’s explosion was the deadliest in the country since an Aug. 4, 2020, blast at Beirut’s port killed at least 214, wounded thousands and destroyed parts of the capital.

 ?? (AP/Hassan Ammar) ?? Marwa El Chiekh speaks on a mobile phone outside a Geitaoui hospital Sunday as she waits for news about her brother who were severely injured in a fuel explosion in northern Lebanon in Beirut, Lebanon. More photos at arkansason­line.com/816lebanon/.
(AP/Hassan Ammar) Marwa El Chiekh speaks on a mobile phone outside a Geitaoui hospital Sunday as she waits for news about her brother who were severely injured in a fuel explosion in northern Lebanon in Beirut, Lebanon. More photos at arkansason­line.com/816lebanon/.

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