13 killed, dozens injured in Western Ghana explosion
At least 13 people were killed and dozens
more injured in western Ghana when a truck loaded with mining explosives
detonated. Ghanaian officials say hundreds of houses were damaged in the blast.
Police say a preliminary investigation has
established that a truck filled with explosives for mining collided with a
motorcycle, resulting in the explosion at Bogoso-Appiatse, a village 300
kilometers west of Accra.
Authorities say 500 buildings were destroyed
in the explosion, displacing over 500 people.
Francisca Brobbey, a village resident, told
VOA in a phone interview that a loud bang was heard from the street that she
thought was a tire bursting. When she saw huge smoke in the sky and fire, she
and others started running for safety. She managed to escape with her children,
although she sustained minor injuries.
Police say along with the 13 dead, the blast
injured 179 people, with at least 45 in critical condition. Initial police
reports had put the death toll at 17 people.
The head of the local government assembly,
Isaac Dasmani, told reporters that Appiatse is almost a ghost town now as
search and rescue operations continue.
"The whole community is gone," he
said. "All the roofs have been ripped off and the buildings have
collapsed. Some of them were in their rooms and they were trapped and we were
able to rescue some of them and some of them unfortunately before we rescued
them they were gone. It's a very sad situation for me today."
Ghana's president, Nana Akufo-Addo, and
opposition leader John Mahama expressed their condolences in separate
statements on social media, describing the incident as a truly sad day in
Ghana.
A government delegation led by Vice President
Mahamudu Bawumia visited the disaster scene Friday morning. In a brief address
to the media, he said the government will provide all the resources to help the
victims.
"It's a sad day, a very sad day for all
of us," Bawumia said. "Just to assure you that the government is
fully engaged in all these processes and we're going to see to it that the
people here are taken care of. We'll learn lessons and those are going to be
much later on. For now, we're very much concerned about how to complete this
rescue effort, how to take care of the injured, how to take care of the family
and the people who have survived."
Authorities are expected to launch a probe to
establish the cause of the blast, and recommend measures to avoid a repeat in
the future.
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