At Least 90 People Killed and 50 Injured after a Gasoline Tanker Explodes in Nigeria

A view shows part of Dangote oil refinery in Ibeju Lekki district, on the outskirts of Lagos, Nigeria. (Reuters)
A view shows part of Dangote oil refinery in Ibeju Lekki district, on the outskirts of Lagos, Nigeria. (Reuters)
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At Least 90 People Killed and 50 Injured after a Gasoline Tanker Explodes in Nigeria

A view shows part of Dangote oil refinery in Ibeju Lekki district, on the outskirts of Lagos, Nigeria. (Reuters)
A view shows part of Dangote oil refinery in Ibeju Lekki district, on the outskirts of Lagos, Nigeria. (Reuters)

More than 90 people have been killed and 50 others injured after a gasoline tanker overturned in Nigeria and sparked an explosion as dozens of people rushed to the vehicle to scoop up the fuel, police said Wednesday.

The explosion occurred past midnight in Jigawa state's Majiya town after the tanker driver lost control of the vehicle while traveling on a highway close to a university, police spokesperson Lawan Adam said.

Deadly tanker accidents are common in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, where traffic regulations are not strictly enforced in many places and there is a lack of alternatives such as an efficient railway system to transport cargo.

It is also common for people to salvage fuel after such accidents, especially with Nigeria's soaring fuel prices.

Residents who heard about the latest accident rushed to the scene and were scooping up fuel, “sparking a massive inferno that killed 94 people on the spot,” Adam said.

Videos that appeared to be from the scene showed a massive fire stretching across the entire area, with what appeared to be bodies littered at the scene.



EU Countries Contributing to UNIFIL See Mission as 'Essential and Fundamental', Spanish Minister

A joint force from UNIFIL and the Lebanese army in Naqoura near the Israeli border (File  - AFP)
A joint force from UNIFIL and the Lebanese army in Naqoura near the Israeli border (File - AFP)
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EU Countries Contributing to UNIFIL See Mission as 'Essential and Fundamental', Spanish Minister

A joint force from UNIFIL and the Lebanese army in Naqoura near the Israeli border (File  - AFP)
A joint force from UNIFIL and the Lebanese army in Naqoura near the Israeli border (File - AFP)

The EU countries contributing to the United Nations peacekeeping mission in Lebanon, dubbed as UNIFIL, say it is "essential and fundamental" and only the UN can decide whether to end it, Spanish Defense Minister Margarita Robles said on Wednesday after a video call with 15 of her counterparts, Reuters reported.

"All the countries that are part of it are firmly supporting the UNIFIL mission, our soldiers, our people who are there," she said in a video statement sent to reporters.

EU countries, led by Italy, France and Spain, have thousands of troops in the 10,000-strong peacekeeping mission in southern Lebanon, which has said it has repeatedly come under attack from Israeli forces in recent days. Israel has called on the United Nations to move the troops out of the combat zone.