(Sitakunda) At least 49 people were killed and more than 300 injured in a huge chemical explosion, triggered by a fire, at a container depot in Sitakunda, Bangladesh, officials said on Sunday.
Updated yesterday at 4:28 p.m.
A worsening of the balance sheet was to be feared, some injured being in critical condition. Volunteer rescuers, sometimes wearing only flip-flops, were extracting corpses from the charred, debris-strewn dump, and claimed there were still some left inside.
The fire broke out around 9:30 p.m. Saturday at a private warehouse housing some 4,000 containers in Sitakunda, about 40 kilometers from the major port of Chittagong in the southeast of the country.
Hundreds of firefighters rushed to the scene to extinguish it but, an hour after the outbreak of the disaster, several containers of chemical products exploded, said the fire services.
“More than 300 people are injured,” Elias Chowdhury, the region’s top health official, told AFP.
According to him, several people are still missing, including journalists who covered the fire live. “The death toll will rise as the rescue operations are not yet complete,” he warned.
“There are still bodies in the places affected by the fire. I saw eight or ten corpses,” a rescue worker told the media.
At least seven firefighters died and four are missing, said Reazul Karim, a fire department official.
The gigantic explosion shook buildings several kilometers away, witnesses said.
“A cylinder flew about half a kilometer from the scene of the fire to land in our small pond,” said Mohgammad Ali, a 60-year-old grocer.
balls of fire
“The explosion sent fireballs into the sky. Balls of fire falling like rain. We were so scared that we immediately fled,” he added.
“The explosion threw me about ten meters from where I was. My hands and legs are burned,” said Tofael Ahmed, a truck driver who was in the warehouse.
The deposit contained hydrogen peroxide, a chemical with multiple industrial uses, Fire Chief Brigadier General Main Uddin told reporters.
“We have still not been able to bring the fire under control due to the existence of this chemical,” he added.
The army announced the dispatch of 250 troops to help with relief operations, including stacking sandbags to prevent chemicals from spilling into the sea.
The depot employed about 600 people, said its director, Mujibur Rahman, who said he did not know the origin of the fire.
Mominur Rahman, the chief administrator of the Chittagong district, announced the opening of an investigation.
He said the depot also contained clothes worth millions of dollars that were to be exported to Western countries.
Around 90% of Bangladesh’s approximately $100 billion in annual trade passes through Chittagong.
This major port has been experiencing a resurgence of activity since the end of last year thanks to the global economic recovery from the pandemic.
Fires are frequent in Bangladesh, where safety standards are poorly respected.
In July 2021, 54 people died in a fire at a gigantic food processing plant outside the capital, Dhaka.
And in February 2020, 70 people died in another fire that ravaged several apartment buildings in Dhaka.