News
Huge fire in Nairobi
Fire fighters battle the huge fire that broke out at Nakumatt Downtown supermarket, Nairobi . Photo /CHRIS OJOW
Posted Wednesday, January 28 2009 at 17:50
In Summary
- Business in Nairobi's central business district brought to a standstill by a massive fire at Nakumatt Downtown on Kimathi Street.
- Security agencies mount a major emergency operation to put the fire under control.
A huge fire has consumed a popular supermarket at the centre of Nairobi resulting in loses worth millions of shillings, dozens of workers injured and the evacuation of several office blocks.
The fire at Nakumatt Downtown at the corner of Kimathi Street and Kenyatta Avenue gutted the entire building and occasioned a major emergency operation involving several security agencies.
The facts so far:
- Massive fire guts Woolworths Building which houses Nakumatt Downtown. The building next door, known as Alibhai Shariff, is also destroyed.
- Ambulances rush dozens of the injured to various hospitals.
- A combined force called in to fight the fire, including: Nairobi City Council Fire Brigade, Kenya Airports Authority fire fighters, G4S Fire Brigade, Kenya Air Force, Securex Fire and Kenya Police among others.
- The fire started at around 3.45pm (GMT +3) and is still being battled five hours later. Earlier a power transformer had blown. Its now night and the scene of the fire is now ringed by a contingent of the General Service Unit (GSU) as firefighters continue battling it.
- Gas cylinders on sale at the supermarket and chemicals at a hardware shop in neighbouring Alibhai Shariff Building are thought to have fuelled the inferno.
- Neighbouring buildings evacuated, including Stanbic Bank, Nation Centre, Nanak Building among others.
- Repeated blasts heard inside the building on fire.
- Police on horseback forced to use teargas to push back curious onlookers. Most roads at the city centre are blocked.
- Several Government officials are at the scene, including Deputy Prime Minister Musalia Mudavadi, Internal Security minister George Saitoti, Nairobi Metropolitan minister Mutula Kilonzo and Police Commissioner Hussein Ali.
- Traffic jams resulting from the chaos at the centre of the city has affected road users in the outskirts such as Industrial Area, Upper Hill, Thika Road and sections of Westlands.
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Submitted by ARTPosted January 30, 2009 05:19 AM
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Submitted by oretabt
wow...Nairobi is beautiful...
Posted January 30, 2009 04:54 AM -
Submitted by bromc
Its a time we taught again on the future of Kenya. Our leaders are lost on yestaday and today and the followers forms the fellowship. Let think of safety and trusted professional operation on disaster management. Alright?
Posted January 30, 2009 01:51 AM -
Submitted by nani_ngombe
kariste72: The guy has a point. Sorry to say this but I laughed out sooo loudly at the foto of one of the 'kajo' firefighters overwhelmed by the water pressure, tried to pin the hose down onto the tarmac. Someone in the crowd noticed and dove down on him...Boy!...there they were with the hosepipe directed into the smoke! I am no firefighter kariste72, but I don't think if that's how they fight fire elsewhere, except Nairobi. It was sooo funny!!!
Posted January 29, 2009 07:10 PM -
Submitted by daintygirlie
this has got to be the saddest thing of all, imagining also that if the concerned authorities were well equipped for such, then the fire would have been contained considering the fact that the fire department of the city council is just situated nearby. hoping we have all learnt a lesson
Posted January 29, 2009 03:37 PM




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I still can't get over the fact that the fire hydrants have not worked in 20 years. What is even more funny is that the poor folks had to drive all the way to Nyayo Stadium to fetch water. Oh what great leaders we have in Kenya. Drought, deadbeat MPs cabinet ministers who pay no taxes and of course the great coalition government, Kenay needs a new leaf and a high-handed( but educated) dictator.