Lebanon explosion toll climbs to 135
Govt. vows justice, orders port staff detained; Beirut Mayor says Lebanon in the grip of a catastrophe
Lebanese rescue workers
searched for survivors in the
mangled wreckage of buildings and investigators
blamed negligence for a massive warehouse explosion
that sent a devastating blast
wave across Beirut, killing at
least 135 people.
Nearly 5,000 people were
injured in Tuesday’s explosion at Beirut port and
tens
of thousands were left without homes fit to live
in after
shockwaves smashed building facades, sucked
furniture
out into streets and shattered glass miles inland.
The death toll was expected to rise from the blast that
officials blamed on a huge
stockpile of highly explosive
material stored for years in
unsafe conditions at the
port.
The explosion was the
most powerful ever to rip
through Beirut, a city still
scarred by civil war that ended three decades ago and
reeling from an economic
meltdown and a surge in coronavirus infections. The
blast rattled buildings on the
Mediterranean island of Cyprus, about 160 km away.
President Michel Aoun
said 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate, used in fertilisers and bombs, had been
stored for six years at the
port without safety measures, after it was seized.
He said in a national address the government was
“determined to investigate
and expose what happened
as soon as possible, to hold
the responsible and the negligent accountable.”
An official source familiar
with preliminary investigations blamed the incident on
“inaction and negligence”,
saying ”nothing was done”
by committees and judges involved in the matter to order
the removal of hazardous
material.
House arrest
The Cabinet ordered port officials involved in storing or
guarding the material since
2014 to be put under house
arrest, ministerial sources
told Reuters. The cabinet also announced a twoweek
state of emergency in Beirut.
“This is a catastrophe for
Beirut and Lebanon.” Beirut's Mayor, Jamal Itani, told
Reuters while inspecting
damage estimated ran into
billions of dollars.
The Health Minister said
the death toll had climbed to
113, as the search for victims
continued after shockwaves
from the blast hurled some
of the victims into the sea.
The Red Cross was coordinating with the Health Ministry to set up morgues as hospitals were overwhelmed.
Beirut's Clemenceau Medical Center was “like a
slaughterhouse, blood covering the corridors and the
lifts,” said Sara, one of its
nurses. “This is the killer
blow for Beirut, we are a disaster zone,” said Bilal, a man
in his 60s, in the downtown
area, who blamed the political elite, calling them
“thieves and looters”.
Offers of international
support poured in. Gulf Arab
states, who in the past were
major financial supporters of
Lebanon but recently
stepped back because of
what they say is Iranian meddling, sent planes with medical equipment and other
supplies. Iran offered food
and a field hospital, ISNA
news agency said.
Germany, the Netherlands
and Cyprus offered specialised search and
rescue
teams.
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