News

Toll rises to 111 from tanker explosion

  Share Bookmark Print Email
Email this article to a friend

Submit Cancel
Rating

Military and doctors at the Rift Valley Provincial General hospital as they organise for transfer of tanker explosion survivors to Kenyatta National Hospital. Photo/JOSEPH KIHERI  


Posted  Sunday, February 1  2009 at  09:25

Rescuers who rushed to the scene had been unable to move in and rescue the victims due to the intense heat.

Molo deputy police boss Daniel Kamanza told the Sunday Nation that he had counted 50 bodies of people who had burnt beyond recognition.

“The number could even be higher,” Mr Kamanza said.

A huge traffic jam built up on both sides of the highway as police blocked off vehicles to avoid secondary accidents. A number of motorcycles and two vehicles also caught fire in the late evening inferno that attracted dozens of shocked onlookers.

Medical staff at the Molo District Hospital where the injured were rushed by good Samaritans were fighting to save the burnt.

Reports from Provincial General Hospital Nakuru indicated that more than 100 victims of the fire tragedy had been received.

Mr Hassan was last night at the scene of the accident to spearhead the rescue efforts. The fire tragedy was the second to hit the country this week.

An eye witness told the Sunday Nation that officers from a nearby GSU camp were the first to arrive at the scene after the tanker crashed. According to the witness, the officers began demanding a fee from those who wished to scoop petrol spilling from the tanker.

Share This Story
Share

Image Gallery

“I heard someone saying that they were going to avenge the fee by starting a fire and left the scene fearing for my life,” the eyewitness said.

“Moments later, I heard the explosion.”

In the confusion the bus left the road and crashed. It is suspected that some of those who burnt were passengers on the bus.

In an earlier interview on Saturday, the Nakuru Municipal Council had conceded that it lacks the capacity to fight big fires.

« Previous Page 1 | 2

Add a comment (44 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by syindumyaki

    nani-ngombe, i agree with u. its strange and a pity that the victims are being blamed here. These are hard economic times, kenyans are starving and others are dying of hunger. what do u expect when they see some free stuff up for grabs? i blame the govt for reducing its subjects to beggars. its wrong!

    Posted  February 02, 2009 08:21 PM  
  2. Submitted by Wanjiku98

    nani_ngombe, i grew up in the rural area and i have never gone to gork when something happens on the village roads. That is how much i fear chaos and acts of random violence either man-made or nature made.(That explosion was very violent) Please don't excuse these things. Keep saying out of touch with rural areas. They are dead. I am glad am out of touch.

    Posted  February 02, 2009 07:06 PM  
  3. Submitted by caseka58

    It all boils down to poverty. If Kenyans were encouraged to work hard they would have sufficient income to cater for their needs.Such accidents would only attract a few on lookers as most of the people in the area of the accident would be busy doing productive work elsewhere. Police would therefore have easy time controlling the crowd.

    Posted  February 02, 2009 06:13 PM  
  4. Submitted by oukojr

    Looting? This people paid for the fuel they were scooping. And if you were dying of hunger, I think you would be doing the same…pay shs50.00 for this oil. Stop blaming the dying mother who sent out their children to buy fuel. Who doesn’t know that we are a corrupt nation, right from the top?

    Posted  February 02, 2009 05:51 PM  
  5. Submitted by colwambui

    i would like to pass my condolences to all the families in Kenya who have lost their loved ones in both tragedies the one for Nakumatt and the other one in the Molo Area its really sad...God heals wounds and He will heal yours also,i will remember you all in my prayers.

    Posted  February 02, 2009 04:26 PM  

See all 44 comments