A subsidiary of Royal
Dutch Shell said Wednesday that it made full payment in damages and
compensation to the victims of an oil tanker fire in Pakistan that killed 215
people last month, hours after Pakistan's oil and gas regulator threatened
legal action.
A
soldier stands guard amid burnt cars and motorcycles at the scene of an oil
tanker explosion in Bahawalpur in Pakistan on Sunday, June 25, 2017.(REUTERS)
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The
tragedy took place after a fuel tanker crashed and started leaking on the side
of a highway and hundreds of people from a nearby village rushed to the scene
to collect the spilled fuel. They were engulfed in flames when the spill
ignited.
Pakistan
subsequently asked Shell to pay US$2.4 million, or US$9,500 to the families of
each person killed.
On
Wednesday, Shell Pakistan Limited in a statement said it made full payment to
Pakistan's Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority, which would distribute the money
among the victims.
The
latest development came after Shell said it was in discussions with Pakistani
authorities over the "means by which this financial assistance can
appropriately reach the injured and the families who have lost their loved
ones." It did not specify the amount it planned to pay.
Imran
Ghazanvi, a spokesman for Pakistan's oil and gas regulator, confirmed they
received about US$2.4 million on Wednesday afternoon. He said their probe found
the company responsible for the disaster. The tanker was not fit to transport
oil and the driver's license was invalid, he added.
Shell
Pakistan Limited had already paid a US$96,000 fine over the disaster.
151 Killed, 140
Injured In Pakistan Oil Tanker Fire
The oil tanker coming from
Karachi and headed to Lahore overturned early this morning on the national
highway at the Ahmedpur Sharqia area of the Bahawalpur district, some 400 km
from Lahore, after a tyre burst and the driver lost control.
By: PTI | Published:
June 25, 2017
An
oil tanker overturned and burst into flames as crowds rushed to collect fuel
that spilled over on a highway in Pakistan’s Punjab Province, killing over 150
people and injuring more than 140 others, in one of the deadliest accidents in
the country. The oil tanker coming from Karachi and headed to Lahore
overturned early this morning on the national highway at the Ahmedpur Sharqia area
of the Bahawalpur district, some 400 km from Lahore, after a tyre burst and the
driver lost control. The fire was apparently caused by someone who lit a
cigarette after people from nearby localities gathered on the highway to
collect petrol, officials said.
Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif, who was in London to celebrate Eid along with his family
members, cut short his visit and left for Pakistan. “This is a tragedy of
its kind in the country’s history that left everyone in grief in Pakistan. My
thoughts are with the victims’ families,” Sharif said before leaving for
Pakistan. Rescue officials said the blaze from the oil spill engulfed
scores of residents, killing 151 people and injuring more than 140 others.
“Some
151 people including women and children lost their lives in this tragedy. The
condition of more than 50 injured is critical and they are being shifted to
Lahore and Faisalabad cities to save their lives,” Rescue official Jam Sajjad
told PTI, adding that the death toll could rise further. He said most of
the dead bodies were completely charred and they will be identified only by DNA
tests. District Coordination Officer (DCO) Bahwalpur Rana Salim Afzal
termed it a “huge tragedy” in the history of Pakistan.
“At
least 123 people were burnt alive and died on the spot while the injured were
shifted to the district headquarters hospital and Victoria Hospital in
Bahawalpur where the condition of most of them is critical,” Afzal said, adding
that about 50,000 litres of fuel spilled from the oil tanker. Muhammad
Hanif, 40, who suffered burns, told reporters at the Victoria Hospital that he
was present at his house when his cousin called him informing that the village
people were rushing to the highway to collect “free oil”.
“My
cousin told me to pick bottles and come out of the house. When I came out of
the house, I saw many people rushing towards the highway and some going there
by motorcycles. Me and my cousin Rashid reached the highway and joined the
people busy in collecting the petrol spilling from the tanker. “Suddenly
the tanker burst and the people gathered near it were burnt alive. Rashid and I
were a little away from the tanker therefore we are alive,” Hanif said.
He
said it was “greed” of the villagers which took them to the “valley of death”.
Video images of the people gathered to collect petrol emerged showing
young and old people filling their bikes with the spilled oil and collecting it
in bottles and cans. The leaking fuel was even flowing along the highway in
the fields. People were seen sitting near the fields collecting fuel in cans
and bottles.
“The
people from nearby villages had also gathered there. The motorway police
personnel who also reached the accident site asked them to leave the place but
they started collecting petrol. Suddenly the tanker exploded and within seconds
the fire erupted giving no chance to the people present there to leave the
place,” Regional Police Officer Bahawalpur Raja Rifat said.
A
number of people reached the site on motorcycles to collect spilling petrol,
Rifat said. “It was a scene of the Day of Judgement. Before my eyes a
large number of people fell prey to a ball of fire. I was sitting in my car a
little away from the oil tanker thinking should I join these people and fill my
car fuel tank with free oil when suddenly the tanker exploded and all the
people close to it trapped in fire and burnt alive within no time,” an
eyewitness named Shahzad Hasan said.
Hasan
said he along with some other people shifted three injured to the Victoria Hospital.
Surprisingly there is no burns unit in the whole district of Bahawalpur.
The Punjab government and army helicopters shifted the critically burnt
people to Multan, Lahore and Faislabad for better health facilities.
According to a government official, at least 75 bikes and about a dozen
cars were also burnt at the site.
Punjab
Chief Minister Shehbaz Sharif announced Rs 2 million each for victims and Rs 1
million each for the injured. He also reached Bahawalpur to ensure best medical
treatment for the injured. Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, President Mamnoon
Hussain, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chairman Imran Khan and Pakistan Peoples
Party chairman Bilawal Bhutto condoled the tragedy. Army chief Gen Qamar
Javed Bajwa ordered the Army to assist the civil administration in the rescue
efforts.
Army helicopters have been deployed in the rescue operations. The tragedy came a day ahead of Eid ul-Fitr celebrations in the country, marking the end of the holy fasting month of Ramzan. The oil tanker tragedy comes about two years after 62 people, including women and children, were killed in a fire after a coach collided with an oil tanker travelling on the wrong side of the road, on the outskirts of Karachi.
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