June 26, 2017

PAKISTAN’S LEADER ORDERS INQUIRY AS FUEL TANKER DEATH TOLL REACHES 157

[Mr. Sharif cut short a private visit to London and returned to Pakistan on Monday, visiting survivors at a hospital in Bahawalpur. “We will get to the bottom of this matter,” he said during a televised news briefing. He said that investigators would look into whether the vehicle had been roadworthy and whether government agencies had failed to enforce regulations.]


By Salman Masood
Emergency workers examining the site of a fuel tanker explosion on Sunday
in Ahmadpur East, a town in the Pakistani province of Punjab.
Credit Iram Asim/Associated Press
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The death toll from a fireball that consumed an overturned fuel truck in eastern Pakistan has reached 157, and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif ordered a high-level inquiry on Monday into what caused such a devastating loss of life.

The blaze in Punjab Province, which also left at least 127 injured, has cast a pall of grief over Eid al-Fitr, the celebration that marks the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, and has raised stark questions about road safety and law enforcement.

Hundreds of people, including women and children, had ignored police warnings and swarmed around an overturned tanker early Sunday in the town of Ahmadpur East. They were using bottles, buckets and pots to collect fuel gushing from the vehicle when the site was engulfed in an enormous fireball.

Mr. Sharif cut short a private visit to London and returned to Pakistan on Monday, visiting survivors at a hospital in Bahawalpur. “We will get to the bottom of this matter,” he said during a televised news briefing. He said that investigators would look into whether the vehicle had been roadworthy and whether government agencies had failed to enforce regulations.

The cause of the fire was still being determined, officials said, but based on several witness accounts, they were leaning toward the possibility that it had started when someone in the crowd had tossed a lit cigarette.

There were contradictory reports about why so many people had rushed to the truck to collect fuel.

Saleemullah, 40, who survived the fire unhurt, said that he had been awakened by his wife early Sunday and told about an announcement from a nearby mosque that alerted people to the overturning of a tanker about a third of a mile from his home.

“My wife said, ‘Go and get fuel for your motorbike,’ as others in the neighborhood were doing so,” said Mr. Saleemullah, who goes by only one name. “People were collecting the fuel in anything they could use. Some motorbike riders were even using their helmets.”

The fire erupted suddenly, Mr. Saleemullah said. “I was standing at a distance and jumped backward when I saw the flame,” he added. Many people jumped into a nearby waterway when the fire broke out, he said.

Government officials disputed that announcements had been made through mosque loudspeakers. “It is unverified, mostly hearsay,” said Salman Sufi, an aide to the Punjab chief minister.

Residents and officials said that many of the victims were travelers passing through the town who had stopped to take part in what seemed like an opportunity to collect free fuel. The town is on a primary route to Lahore, the capital of the province of Punjab, which was where the truck had been headed.

Government officials blamed poverty and illiteracy for the crowd’s behavior.

“Those were poor people who went to collect fuel in utensils and buckets,” said the Punjab chief minister, Shahbaz Sharif, at the briefing with the prime minister. “It is the result of illiteracy,” he said, adding that several decades of endemic corruption were also a factor.

Officials said most of the bodies had been burned beyond recognition. Several others were 40 percent to 80 percent burned, making identification difficult.

The chief minister, who is in his third term, said that hospital authorities had tagged the bodies and that forensic examination, including DNA tests, would be carried out in the next few days. “Meanwhile, the dead are being buried, as it is not possible to keep them in cold storage for long due to the hot weather,” he said. Once forensic reports are available, the chief minister said, relatives would be informed.

At Victoria Hospital in Bahawalpur, many people waited to learn the fate of their relatives.

The bodies of 125 victims were placed in the cold storage of the hospital, officials said.

Shaista Bibi said she was searching for her 10-year-old son, who had been missing since the fire. “They are not telling me where my son is,” she said. “At least tell me whether he is alive or not.”

She noted that her son was too young to use fuel. “Where would he use it?” she asked. “It was just fun for the children. They were just collecting something for free.”

By Monday afternoon, only five bodies had been identified and returned to relatives, hospital officials said.

Muhammad Bilal, a resident of Basti Ramzan Joia, a settlement near the crash site, said that many of those killed had been from the town. “It is embarrassing for us that our village is mentioned in a way that we were greedy for just a few liters of free fuel,” he said. “At the moment, everyone is in a state of shock. We just want the dead bodies back.”

Asim Tanveer contributed reporting from Bahawalpur, Pakistan, and Daniyal Hassan from Lahore, Pakistan.