Monday, 12 September 2011

Pipeline fire kills dozens in Kenya

At least 61 bodies have been recovered after petrol that spilled into an open sewer caught fire and sent a wave of flame through a densely populated slum in the Kenyan capital, police said.
Kenyan media put the toll higher, saying more than 100 people had been burned to death and a similar number taken to hospital in one of the worst fire disasters in the east African country.
Police said a large number of people had died and it was proving difficult to establish the exact figure because some charred remains had been found huddled in groups.
Residents said petrol had spilled from a fuel depot owned by the Kenya Pipeline Company and had run into a sewage dyke under the slum, which is known as Sinai. The petrol ignited, causing an inferno that left charred corpses and burnt skeletons.
"We have confirmed 61 dead so far, but we are retrieving more," the deputy police spokesman Charles Owino told Reuters.
Owino said the fire was ignited by a cigarette butt that was tossed on to the dyke, which opens into a small river.
Authorities said they were battling the fire before completing the death toll count.
Local television channels aired images of smouldering skeletons as the fire raged through the slum covering an area police said was about half a hectare in size.
Children in school uniform ran in all directions, crying. Badly burnt slum dwellers staggered in a daze, skin peeling off their faces and arms.
The Kenyan prime minister, Raila Odinga, visited the scene of the fire and promised help for the victims of the fire.
"The government will do everything possible to ensure the injured will be treated and the families who have lost their loved ones will be compensated," he said.
The country's president, Mwai Kibaki, visited patients with severe burns at the country's largest public hospital.
Police said some of the residents of the slum were killed while trying to scoop up the fuel from the burst pipe and from the sewer.
"The scene is bad. There is a large number of people burnt to death," Owino said. "There are many bodies. We are yet to count them. Sometimes poverty can push you to do very dangerous things."
Abandoned jerry cans half filled with petrol littered the scene where dozens of fire trucks and ambulances tried to make their way through the large crowd that gathered at the scene.
Firefighters scrambled across the corrugated rooftops of burning shacks to spray foam on petrol that flowed down the slum's muddy alleyways. Others pulled off the iron sheet rooftops to gain more access into the slum.
Fire trucks sprayed more foam to quench the inferno, while ambulances ferried dozens of injured to nearby hospitals. "There is an informal school inside the slum. They have all been burnt," said Daniel Mutinda, a spokesman the Kenya Red Cross.
In a similar accident about 120 people died when a crowd scrabbling for free fuel crowded around a tanker that crashed near the Rift valley town of Molo in January 2009. A cigarette set off the blaze, which engulfed the crowd.
One of the residents of the slum said people had rushed to fill their jerry cans with free petrol before the explosion.
"I was going to the loo down by the river just after 4am when I saw the gold flowing from the pipe. I ran home and grabbed two jerry cans and went back to fill them up. As I finished and turned away there was a boom as the fuel ignited," said Sammy Njenga, a 21-year-old unemployed slum dweller.
"I could feel the flames on my back and dropped one can so I could run further. But it spread so fast I dropped the other as well," he said.
"I had been standing next to a mother of three who wasn't fast enough. She died."

taken from http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/sep/12/pipeline-fire-nairobi-slum

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