News Flash
NAIROBI, Feb 5, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - The death toll from a gas explosion in
Nairobi last week has risen to six after three more victims died from their
burns, the government's spokesperson said Sunday.
Of the 280 wounded in Thursday night's blast, 53 are still receiving care in
two of the Kenyan capital's hospitals.
A truck laden with gas canisters exploded just before midnight Thursday in
Embakasi, a densely populated Nairobi district, unleashing a trail of
destruction and sending people running for their lives.
"We regret to report that three more individuals have succumbed to their
injuries, raising the deaths toll from the Embakasi fire incident to six,"
spokesman Isaac Maigua Mwaura said in a statement.
So far, the only person arrested was a security guard at the site.
"The search is still ongoing for the owner of that business," a police source
told AFP
But a lawyer for the suspect said he wasn't hiding and bore no
responsibility.
"My client was not operating a gas-filling plant," the lawyer said during a
press conference Saturday. "He was operating a garage and the vehicle that
caused the accident was trespassing the premise."
- 'Incompetence and corruption' -
Embakasi is a residential and industrial area with a population of about one
million according to the 2019 census which lies 10 kilometres (six miles)
from Kenya's main international airport.
The Petroleum Institute of East Africa said initially on Friday that the
explosion occurred at an "illegal LPG refilling and storage site" whose owner
and some customers had been convicted and sentenced in May 2023.
But Kenya's National Environment Authority (NEMA) on Saturday said Maxxis
Nairobi Energy had obtained permission on February 2 last year to operate the
site. Four NEMA employees have been suspended.
President William Ruto, without mentioning NEMA, said that "government
officials issued licences for gas installations in residential areas when it
was very clear that it was the wrong thing to do, but because of incompetence
and corruption they issued licences."
Ruto said they should be sacked and "prosecuted for the crimes they have
committed".
A joint statement by the interior and energy ministers said that according to
preliminary findings, "the refilling of LPG cylinders was done using direct
manifold connections to LPG tanker increasing the risk of leakage and
explosion".
"Twice in March 2020 and January 2021, the plant that was illegally
constructed at the said location was demolished... the operators charged in
court," it added.