MOROGORO, Tanzania: Police tape cordons off the area where the carcass of a burnt out fuel tanker is seen along the side of the road following an explosion yesterday in Morogoro, 200 kilometers west of the Tanzanian capital Dar es Salaam. - AFP

MOROGORO: At
least 60 people perished in Tanzania yesterday when a fuel tanker overturned
and then exploded as people rushed to syphon off leaking fuel. The deadly
blast, which took place near the town of Morogoro, west of the economic capital
Dar es Salaam, is the latest in a series of similar disasters in Africa.
Morogoro governor Stephen Kebwe said the bodies of 60 victims were at the
morgue of the local hospital, where more than 70 people were also being treated
for injuries. He warned that the toll could rise with victims possibly trapped
under the truck.

Regional police
chief Willbrod Mtafungwa told reporters there was a "huge explosion"
after the vehicle overturned. Witnesses told AFP by telephone they could see
charred remains of motorcycle taxis and trees scorched by the power of the
explosion. Mtafungwa said the dead were mainly drivers of the taxis known as
"boda-boda" and local residents flocking to the scene for the fuel
after the crash. A video posted on social media showed dozens of people busy
trying to recover fuel in yellow jerricans.

'Never seen such
disaster'

The governor said
the explosion was triggered when a man tried to pull out the truck's battery,
while witnesses said one of the people looting the fuel was smoking a
cigarette. Police later announced the blaze had been brought under control.
"The Morogoro region had never experienced a disaster of such
magnitude," Kebwe told reporters at the scene in the locality of Msamvu,
about 200 kilometers (125 miles) west of Dar es Salaam. He said the tanker
truck overturned on the roadside and the "fuel began to flow freely".
"We have mobilized all the doctors at the Morogoro regional hospital so
the wounded can be treated," he added.

Such disasters
are not uncommon in Africa. Last month, at least 45 people were killed and more
than 100 injured in central Nigeria when a petrol tanker crashed and then
exploded as people were trying to gather fuel. In May, a similar incident
occurred in Niger just a short distance from the airport in the capital Niamey,
leaving almost 80 people dead. Among the deadliest such disasters, 292 people
lost their lives in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo in July 2010, and
in September 2015 at least 203 people perished in the town of Maridi in South
Sudan.- AFP