A lorry loaded with liquid petroleum gas cylinders exploded and set off a late-night inferno that burned homes and warehouses in Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, killing at least three people and injuring more than 280. The death toll is expected to increase.
At least 24 people were critically injured, the Kenya Red Cross said, after a huge fireball erupted from the gas depot. Some gas cylinders were thrown hundreds of metres, sparking several separate fires.
The lorry was parked inside a gas cylinder storage and filling site that had multiple applications to operate there rejected last year because it was too close to residential areas, Kenya’s Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority said, raising questions about whether the site was operating illegally.
“The government knew this liquid petroleum gas plant was existing in a residential area, but they did nothing,” resident Charles Mainge said. “They should make sure this doesn’t happen again.”
Witnesses said they heard a sound they suspected to be gas leaking from inside the storage site before at least two explosions and the massive fire, which broke out at about 11.30pm on Thursday. A huge fireball lit up the night sky.
Many people were probably inside when the fire reached their homes in the Mradi area of the Nairobi neighbourhood of Embakasi, the government’s spokesperson, Isaac Mwaura, said.
A flying gas cylinder set off a fire that burned down a nearby garment and textile warehouse, Mwaura said. Several other vehicles and businesses were damaged in the blaze.
Videos taken by witnesses showed the fireball erupting after an explosion next to blocks of flats. People could be heard screaming.
At the scene on Friday morning, several houses and shops were burned out. The roof of a four-storey residential building about 200 metres from the explosion was broken by another flying gas cylinder. Electrical wires lay on the ground.
Nothing remained at the burned-out gas storage site except the shells of several trucks.
Alfred Juma, who lives in the area, said neighbours told him they suspected there was a gas leak and he heard a loud noise from a cylinder in the storage site next to his house when he went outside.
“I started waking up neighbours, asking them to leave,” Juma said. He said he warned a black car not to drive through the area, but the driver insisted and his vehicle stalled because of the gas fumes. “He attempted to start the car three times and that’s when there was an explosion and the fire spread … setting off other explosions.”
The shell of that black vehicle was lying on its side in the aftermath.
Juma said he helped two children and they hid in a sewage ditch until the explosions ended. His family had not been at home, but Juma said he had lost everything he owned in the fire.
Charles Mainge said people had expressed concerns over the gas site. He said there were at least two main explosions, the second of which knocked him and others off their feet after they left their houses to see what was happening.
Police and the Kenya Red Cross reported three deaths and said the toll may rise, according to Wesley Kimeto, the Embakasi police chief.
Resident Caroline Karanja said police had moved people out and were preventing them from returning to their homes. She said the smell and the smoke were still choking and that she would have to stay away because she had young children.
The Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority said the gas storage site had made applications for construction permits to build a plant and operate there in March, June and July last year.
All applications were rejected because they “did not meet the set criteria for an LPG [liquid petroleum gas] storage and filling plant in that area”, the authority said in a statement Friday. “The main reason for the rejection was failure of the designs to meet the safety distances stipulated.”
One of the stipulations was that the gas business submit a risk assessment called a “blast profile”, which would estimate how surrounding areas would be affected in the event of an explosion, the regulatory authority said. The gas storage business never submitted those assessments, it said.
The continued operation of the gas storage and filling site is likely to put authorities’ enforcement of regulations under heavy scrutiny. Local government officials have been accused of taking bribes to overlook infractions of building codes.