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100 killed in Nairobi fuel fire

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Doctors at the Kenyatta National Hospital assist one of the victims of the fire tragedy in Nairobi on September 12, 2011.

PHOTO/STEPHEN MUDIARI/NATION Doctors at the Kenyatta National Hospital assist one of the victims of the fire tragedy in Nairobi on September 12, 2011.  

By  TIM WANYONYI twanyonyi@ke.nationmedia.com AND LUCAS BARASA lbarassa@ke.natinmedia.com
Posted  Monday, September 12  2011 at  21:00

In Summary

  • Villagers scooping petrol from storm drain killed as fuel explodes
  • River of fire streaks into village, consuming tens in their homes
  • Children at a local school, including some in nursery, among the missing
  • Kenya Pipeline says petrol from a leak carried to village by rain water

More than 100 people were killed in a petrol fire and 160 others needed hospital treatment in Nairobi on Monday.

In one of Kenya’s deadliest tragedies, villagers scooping petrol from storm drains were killed after the fuel exploded into flames.

The petrol came from a leak on the bypass between the Mombasa-Nairobi and Nairobi-Eldoret pipelines.

Kenya Pipeline Company (KPC) said its engineers shut down the main Mombasa pipeline, through which fuel is transported from the Coast to storage depots upcountry, when the leak was detected.

But storm water from the rains in the city on Monday morning, managing director Selest Kilinda said, swept the spilt fuel through storm drains into Ngong River, on the banks of which the slum is located.

Villagers rushed to scoop the fuel gushing from the storm drains. An explosion shortly after 9am blew off manhole covers, sent rivers of fire streaking into the slum and killed many slum dwellers, many charred beyond recognition.

KPC said due to blocked sewer lines, the built-up pressure started ripping out manholes covers, blowing them away one after the other in the direction of the source of the leakage.

Engineers poured foam to prevent fire from spreading back to the pipeline, but that did not save the village of Sinai Lunga Lunga whose residents are now in mourning. 

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Mr David Kania, a mechanic who was working at a nearby garage, was one of the first persons to arrive at the scene and helped in the rescue efforts. He drove three of his neighbours, whom he named only as Mama Murugi, Karanja and Karani, to Kenyatta National Hospital.

All had been burned as they tried to save children trapped in shacks.

“It was like hell,’’ he said, comparing the flames to what he has seen in movies about the Hiroshima nuclear bombing.

The fire burned an area the width of a football pitch and nearly a kilometre along the river bank.

Firefighters and rescuers had a hard time accessing the slum as there are no roads.

Victims told harrowing stories of losing loved ones and miraculous ones of survival.

One man survived because the fire started shortly after he went to fetch a jerrican to scoop fuel, but lost his six-year daughter whom he had left in the house.

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Add a comment (56 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by Isaya Baraza

    Winners make mistakes but they dont repeat them. Kenyans have never never learned from tragedies of petrol explosions ever since. Security and Safety is an individual responsibility and we Kenyans must learn that. We are quick to point fingers to so and so without thinking indepth the causes of mass deaths as a result of explosions. Its total negligence from our sides to say the truth.

    Posted  September 14, 2011 01:50 PM  
  2. Submitted by markos21

    Maji yakimwagika, hayazoleki! You cannot sincerely blame the victims for trying to get the oil, remember, you have your daily food three times a day and they work their heads only to sleep hungry many a times, also the oil will only get to waste since you cannot recover it once it seeps through the soil. The whole blame goes to pipeline and its methods of maintainance

    Posted  September 14, 2011 01:09 PM  
  3. Submitted by billochi

    Those who died because they live here did so because of the struggle to survive without basic needs. They dont have proper shelter and this is not their choice. I'm sure if it were they would probably live next to Tuju. probably the petrol would be sold to buy some meet which they rarely eat. Remember a few weeks ago people were dying of hunger, another basic need and last week education which is another basic need was in jeopardy. If we still struggle with basic needs will we ever get to see vision 2030 achieved.

    Posted  September 14, 2011 12:20 PM  
  4. Submitted by GabidonW

    Mr President/Mr Prime Minister It is actually very sad that such a tragedy has happened and you turn a blind eye Yes not only only was the pipeline not checked regularly it should have been isolated from populated areas it is shameful that people you run to protect are the Hague criminals It is really shameful.

    Posted  September 14, 2011 11:05 AM  
  5. Submitted by kalungawanje

    Kenyans are now rebelious, even attacking law enforcement officers. am sure if some one may be fom KPC had tried to move these people some politician would have come running to stop it. thats our country. And then we keep blaming the government! and keep dying!!

    Posted  September 14, 2011 08:52 AM  

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