Prime minister rushes home to comfort tanker fire victims
PAKISTAN’S prime minister cut short a trip abroad to rush to the side of victims of a massive fuel tanker fire as authorities raised the death toll to 157.
The truck, carrying some 25,000 liters of gasoline, was traveling from the southern port city of Karachi to Lahore, the Punjab provincial capital, when the driver lost control and crashed on a highway outside the town of Bahawalpur early on Sunday.
Alerted by an announcement over a mosque loudspeaker that an overturned tanker truck was leaking fuel, scores of villagers rushed to the scene to collect the spilled fuel when the blaze ignited. The wreck exploded, engulfing people in flames as they screamed in terror.
Dr Nahid Ahmed at the Nishter Hospital in Multan, about 100 kilometers from the site of the fire, said four victims brought from Bahawalpur had died overnight, bringing the death toll to 157. Ahmed said 50 more severely burned victims were being treated at his hospital.
Rescue official Mohammad Baqar at the Bahawalpur hospital said 20 more victims were transported by a military C-130 plane to Lahore yesterday for better medical care.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who visited the Victoria Hospital in Bahawalpur, ordered that more of the most critically hurt be transferred to bigger hospitals in the area, Baqar said.
Sharif cut short his trip abroad and rushed back home, reaching Bahwalpur yesterday to visit the victims and console affected families. Sharif also announced 2 million rupees (US$20,000) in financial assistance for each family that had lost a family member in the highway inferno. Sharif also handed over checks of 1 million rupees for each burned victim being treated at the hospital in Bahawalpur.
“This is not compensation, no compensation is possible for precious human life, but it is to help the affected families in distress,” Sharif said, expressing prayers for those killed and for the recovery of the injured.
Many of the bodies were burned beyond recognition and will have to be identified through DNA testing.
“I have never seen anything like it in my life. Victims trapped in the fireball. They were screaming for help,” said Abdul Malik, a police officer among the first on the scene.
When the flames subsided, he said, “we saw bodies everywhere. So many were just skeletons. The people who were alive were in really bad shape.”
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