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Pipeline
rupture kills hundreds in Nigeria
Foreign Desk Report
LAGOS—Hundreds of people were burned alive on Tuesday when fuel from a
vandalized pipeline exploded in Nigeria’s largest city, Lagos, emergency
workers said. Crowds of local residents went to scoop up petrol using
plastic containers after an armed gang punctured the underground
pipeline overnight to siphon fuel into road tankers.
“We cannot confirm how many hundreds were killed, but we know it is more
than 200,” said Abiodun Orebiyi, secretary-general of the Nigerian Red
Cross, adding that 60 people were taken to hospital with serious burns.
A Red Cross official at the scene said 250 were confirmed dead, adding
that they were still collecting names of the missing.
The remains of hundreds of bodies, most burned beyond recognition, could
be seen at the scene of the blast in the densely populated Abule Egba
district, next to a ramshackle car workshop and a saw mill. Some corpses
lay rigid on the ground — arms and legs thrust awkwardly in the air —
their clothes and skin burned off by the blast. Others were reduced to
ash.
It took fire fighters equipped with leaking water hoses about six hours
to extinguish the flames as hundreds of people came to watch. In the
absence of an ambulance service, one group of volunteers loaded charred
corpses into an estate car operated by the Lagos road safety authority.
Some women sat crying on a bench.
“One friend knocked on our door and told my husband they were taking
fuel. My husband ran out with two buckets and now he has gone. This is a
curse from God,” said a woman who gave her name as Ole. Youths with
jerry cans were offering stolen fuel on a nearby roadside at double the
official price. Long queues have formed at fuel stations across Nigeria
over the past few weeks because of shortages in supply from the national
oil company.
“Because of the scarcity, people want to make a quick profit or just
fill their tank,” Orebiyi said. Despite huge exports of crude oil,
Nigeria suffers regular shortages of petrol and diesel because it relies
on imports of refined fuel from the West. Industry experts estimate that
about five percent of Nigeria’s crude oil is stolen for export by
criminal syndicates with contacts in the military and government.
But smaller-scale theft of gasoline and diesel is also common, and much
more deadly because of the highly flammable nature of these fuels. A
similar explosion at a vandalized pipeline in another part of Lagos in
May killed about 200 people.
Up to 500 people were burned alive on Tuesday when fuel from a
vandalized pipeline exploded in Nigeria’s largest city, Lagos, emergency
workers said.
Hundreds of residents of the Abule Egba district went to scoop fuel
using plastic containers after thieves punctured the pipeline overnight.
“We are talking hundreds (dead). We are yet to confirm the death toll so
we don’t know if it is 300, 400 or 500,” Red Cross secretary-general
Abiodun Orebiyi said, adding that 60 people had been evacuated to
hospital with serious burns.
A Reuters witness saw hundreds of bodies, most burned beyond
recognition, lying at the scene of the explosion as emergency workers
tried to put out the fire.
A Red Cross volunteer at the scene said: “A lot of people have been
roasted. They are littered on the ground.” |