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Thứ Ba, 13 tháng 9, 2011

At least 75 Kenyans dead after pipeline explosion


AP
NAIROBI, SEP 13 -

Joseph Mwangi hoped and prayed his children had escaped the inferno caused when a leaking gasoline pipeline exploded on Monday, sending flames racing through a Nairobi slum and killing at least 75 people.

Then he saw two small blackened bodies in the wreckage of his home.

"Those were my children," he sobbed, collapsing in anguish amid the charred corrugated iron sheets and twisted metal.

Mwangi had been feeding his cow when the call went out around 9 a.m. — a section of pipe had burst near the river that cuts through the slum and gasoline was pouring out. Men, women and children grabbed pails, jerry cans, anything they could find to collect the flowing fuel.

Mwangi had planned to get a bucket and join them — he'd done so before with earlier diesel leaks without any problem, he said, and a bucket of fuel could pay a month's rent. "Everybody knows that fuel is gold," the 34-year-old said.

But before he could join the others, an explosion rocked the area, sending a fireball racing through the Sinai slum in Nairobi's industrial zone. Screaming men and women in flames desperately jumped into the river and a nearby sewage ditch, but fuel had leaked into the rancid water and in many places it caught alight.

Red Cross coordinator Pamela Indiaka said at least 75 bodies had been recovered and the death toll was expected to rise. At least 112 people were taken to hospitals with severe burns.

"I've lost count of the number of bodies," said police official Wilfred Mbithi as he stood at the scene, where burned corpses floated in the waste water for most of the day. Nearby, a young woman in jeans clawed at a smoldering pile, shrieking with grief.

Hours after the blast, charred skeletons lay on the ground as firefighters battled to control the flames and shocked, weeping residents wandered through the wreckage.

Survivors told of hellish scenes as flames leaped through the slum's twisting, filthy alleyways filled with people. Some burning victims fled into nearby homes igniting bed linen or clothing.

Michael Muriuki said that's what happened to his wife and three children when neighbors, their clothing aflame, ran into their shack while he was at work. His wife and two of the children escaped, but his 5-year-old daughter was trapped. Muriuki found her smoldering body when he returned home.

"Her name was Josephine," he said brokenly.

Monday's blast was not the first time scores of poor Kenyans have died in a terrible blaze while scooping up spilled fuel. In 2009, at least 120 people were killed after a huge crowd descended on an overturned gasoline tanker, which then blew up. But poverty-stricken families say they have little choice: spiraling food and fuel prices mean many cannot even feed their children.

The head of the state-owned Kenya Pipeline Company, which operates the stricken pipeline, said the gasoline leak was caused when a gasket burst due to pressure buildup in the pipe. The cause of the explosion was not immediately known, though garbage fires are common in the area.

"It was a technical problem due to overpressure," said KPC head Selest Kilinda, speaking on national television station NTV. "The pressure must have been very robust to tear a gasket."

At least 112 burn victims arrived at Kenyatta National Hospital, where there was in urgent need of blood donors and blankets, said director Richard Lisiyampe. Many children were among the victims, and most had burns covering more than a third of their bodies, he said.

Inside the hospital, beds were crowded together and doctors and nurses rushed from victim to victim, many of whom had strips of skin peeling from their heads and bodies. One man picked at his hands distractedly, peeling off skin like gloves.

"Every place was full of fire even in the water. My survival is a miracle," said 27-year-old George Njoroge, who escaped by jumping in the sewage and was lying in bed with burned hands and a bandaged head.

"I asked my wife about (our children) but she doesn't know their fate."

Prime Minister Raila Odinga visited the hospital and said the government would cover medical expenses for the injured and compensation to those who lost loved ones.

"It is terrible, terrible, terrible," said Odinga. "There will be a proper investigation."

The Red Cross set up two tents for first aid and counseling and was providing body bags and materials for temporary shelter.

If the explosion had happened in a rich part of the capital, said resident Evans Makali, the government would be sued. But since it happened to poor people, nothing would change, he said. Activists say Kenya's government is notoriously corrupt and donors have condemned officials for manipulating food prices and skimming millions of dollars from programs meant to help the poor.

Keys handover row: Dahal asks Baidya to stick to party policy

sep 12
Expressing his displeasure at the recent activities of the party’s hard-line faction, UCPN (Maoist) Chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal has urged Vice Chairman Mohan Baidya to adhere to party’s official line of peace and constitution.

Dahal called Baidya at his residence after the hard-line camp took to the streets against the party’s decision to hand over keys to the Maoist arms containers, held factional meetings across the country and imparted paramilitary training to cadres loyal to it. During the discussion, Dahal said there was no alternative to working for peace and constitution as a consolidated party. In response, Baidya asked Dahal to apologise for decisions he had taken without discussing enough the issue in the party while handing over the keys.

“Dahal requested Baidya to support the party’s bid on peace and constitution and present his differences in the party’s Central Committee meeting,” said Haribol Gajurel, a leader close to Dahal. The establishment faction (led by Dahal and Prime Minister Baburam Bhattarai) and Baidya are at loggerheads over some issues pertaining to integration and rehabilitation of the party’s combatants. The Maoist party has called its Central Committee meeting on September 30 to sort out differences over combatant integration and keys handover issues. The hard-line faction is pressing the establishment faction not to take any decision on integration before the Central Committee decides a clear position on peace and constitution.

However, Dahal and Bhattarai are saying that they are free to take any decision on integration on the basis of the party’s bottom line passed by the Standing Committee on August 25. The PM’s plan to start the regrouping process before he leaves for New York to participate in the UN General Assembly is likely to be affected due to the position taken by the hardliners.

Dahal also asked Baidya to join the government but the latter turned down the request saying there was no moral and political ground to join the Cabinet without ending the keys handover row. “The Baidya faction sticks to its position on peace, constitution and keys handover,” said Gajurel. In an effort to solve the dispute, Dahal also met General Secretary and party’s military department chief Ram Bahadur Thapa, who is also unhappy with Dahal over the keys issue. Thapa had joined hands with Baidya against the decision of the party establishment.
sorce - e kantipur

Difficult days ahead for Nepal


SEP 12 -
Nepal’s hopes of the qualifying it to the next round of the AFC U-16 Championship hangs by a thread after they were beaten 2-0 by Syria on the first day of the Group D qualifiers at the Dashrath Stadium on Monday.

At the Halchowk Stadium, Saudi Arabia hammered Oman 3-0 to climb atop the group standings with three points ahead of Syria, who trail them on goal difference.

Faced with a daunting task of competing against a physically superior opponent who were double the size of most of the Nepali squad members, the home team’s challenge was made more difficult when they conceded an early goal in third minute. Ahmad Ashqar scored from a corner, making full use of the lack of coordination between the Nepali players. The next goal for the visitors took nearly 80 minutes to come but when it did, it spelt the end of home team’s challenge and also gave an ominous sign of the worst days to come for the home team that is playing against powerhouse Saudi Arabia, who are feared even by Syria.

Substitute Abdul Razak scored from against the run of play in the 82nd minute. Nepal’s poor defending was again to blame for.

Nepal’s coach Sunil Shrestha did not easily rule out his team’s chances. He agreed that the task had been made difficult but still saw a silver lining. “We lost an important match today. Though we have to face stronger teams like Saudi Arabia and Oman in next matches, anything can happen in football. We still have chances,” he said. “The early goal we conceded was the reason behind our loss. We did get a host of chances in the match but our poor finishing cost us dear.’

Contrary to what Shresth said, Nepal’s performance, in fact, took a turn for good after they conceded the early goal. Skipper Heman Gurung and Biswas Shrestha put up a sterling up front but could not make the pressure pay. Gurung, like always, was lethal with his freekicks, and in the 47th minute he almost found the back of the net from almost the centre line. His first real attempt was in 29th minute but curled his shot a little more than what was needed.

Syria’s coach Muhannad Al Fakker said he feared the Nepali team the most before the match because Nepal was a mystery team for him. “I did want to take on Nepal on the first day because I did not know much about the team,” he said. “Nepal were strong and very quick side but we scored. In the second half we played well.”

Syria’s next encounter is against Saudi Arabia on Wednesday. The Saudi have a better record against the Syrians, winning twice in the U-14 category recently. Nepal, meanwhile take on Oman on the same day.

Saudi Arabia, like expected, emerged as the favourites from the group, hammering Oman 3-0.

They scored their first in the 34th minute through Sumayhan Daidan and got their second in the hour’s mark. Abdul Kareem was the scorer. Hasan Farid sealed the win three

minutes later.
sorce - e kantipur