Petrol station blast in Ghana flood kills 73

Flooding in Ghana’s capital swept stored fuel into a nearby fire, setting off a huge explosion at a petrol station that killed 73 people and set alight neighbouring buildings, authorities said yesterday.
Firefighters spray water over the smoldering remains a gas station following an explosion in Accra, Ghana. Picture: APFirefighters spray water over the smoldering remains a gas station following an explosion in Accra, Ghana. Picture: AP
Firefighters spray water over the smoldering remains a gas station following an explosion in Accra, Ghana. Picture: AP

The blast took place as dozens of people sought shelter at the petrol station and in nearby shops in central Accra to escape the torrential rains. The disaster raised new concerns over the city’s inadequate infrastructure.

TV footage showed corpses being piled into the back of a pick-up truck and other charred bodies trapped amid the debris. Floodwaters around the site hampered rescue and recovery efforts. Officials at the nearby 37 Military Hospital said its morgue had reached capacity.

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President John Dramani Mahama visited the scene yesterday, calling the death toll “catastrophic” and offering condolences to families of the victims. “Steps will be taken to ensure that disastrous floods and their attendant deaths do not occur again,” he said.

Michael Plange, who lives a few blocks away, said many ­people had taken shelter under a shed at the station from the rain and were hit by the explosion.

The flooding “caused the diesel and petrol to flow away from the gas station and a fire from a nearby house led to the explosion,” said Billy Anaglate, spokesman for Ghana’s national fire service.

In addition to the dead at the petrol station, local media reported that many drowned in various parts of the city following two days of torrential rains. The combined death toll from the explosion and flooding is expected to rise. Mr Anaglate said precise figures were not available yesterday.

Britain’s high commissioner to Ghana, Jon Benjamin, ­expressed his condolences to the families of the victims, on Twitter.

He tweeted: “Desperately sad to hear of the large number of deaths in the tragic fire at a filling station in Accra last night. Our deepest condolences.”

The explosion is likely to intensify criticism of the government’s failure to improve the infrastructure of the country as a whole. Though the downpours this week have been especially bad, heavy rains in June are not unusual, yet drainage systems in Accra remain inadequate.

The area where the blast occurred is a heavily trafficked section of central Accra with several banks and other offices in addition to residences.

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Multiple bus terminals connect the area to the rest of the city.

Throughout Accra, drivers caught in the flooding abandoned their cars on the road. The Education Ministry instructed all children who were not already at school yesterday morning to stay at home.

The city is also grappling with an energy crisis resulting in blackouts lasting for as long as 48 hours in recent years, sparking large-scale demonstrations which have drawn everyone from blue-collar workers to local movie stars.