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Lebanon: at least 10 killed as huge explosion rocks Beirut | Lebanon: at least 10 killed as huge explosion rocks Beirut |
(32 minutes later) | |
Dozens also injured in blast, which apparently occurred around city’s port area | Dozens also injured in blast, which apparently occurred around city’s port area |
Two huge explosions have rocked central Beirut, killing at least 10 people, shattering windows, knocking down doors and shaking buildings across the city. | |
The blasts ripped through a section of the Lebanese capital’s port, sending an enormous blast wave across the city, which left leaving hundreds of homes uninhabitable. Hundreds of people sought treatment in nearby hospitals, which were struggling to cope with the casualties. Cars were left strewn across the surrounding highway, and the blast was heard up to 50 miles away in northern Lebanon. | |
Hours after the explosion, which took place at 6.05pm (1605 BST), the cause remained unclear. The Lebanese security chief Abbas Ibrahim blamed combustible chemicals stored in a warehouse. The interior minister, Mohammed Fahmi, said ammonium nitrate had been among the materials stored and called for an investigation. | |
So big was the force of the blast that it even rattled buildings in west and south Beirut, causing widespread panic three days before the verdict is due in an international tribunal trial for four men accused of blowing up a former Lebanese prime minister 15 years ago. | |
The Israeli government said its forces had not carried out an attack. The Beirut port is known to be used by the militant group come political bloc Hezbollah, which denied any of its facilities had been hit. | |
The final death toll from the biggest explosion to ever rock Beirut is expected to be significantly higher. | |
Georges Kettaneh, a Lebanese Red Cross official, said more deaths were expected when rescue teams combed through damaged buildings. | |
A doctor at St George’s hospital, less than 2km (1.2 miles) from the blast, said injured people were being brought for treatment but were unable to be received because the hospital had been destroyed. | |
“They’re bringing people to the hospital but we can’t treat them,” he said. “They’re leaving them outside in the street. The hospital is broken, the ER is broken.” | “They’re bringing people to the hospital but we can’t treat them,” he said. “They’re leaving them outside in the street. The hospital is broken, the ER is broken.” |
Videos shot by bystanders and posted to social media showed a smaller explosion with mini blasts rippling through a warehouse, followed by an enormous secondary blast, which lifted cars from a nearby highway and ravaged a nearby overpass. | |
An enormous cloud of smoke could be seen from across the city and witnesses said there were reports of a fire and several smaller explosions at the port that preceded the large blast. | |
The impact of the blast was felt 200km away in Cyprus. “Everyone in Cyprus felt it,” said George, a resident of Larnaca. “The door was shaking in my house. In Larnaca they heard it and felt it … It was so loud we thought it happened here. My house was shaking.” | The impact of the blast was felt 200km away in Cyprus. “Everyone in Cyprus felt it,” said George, a resident of Larnaca. “The door was shaking in my house. In Larnaca they heard it and felt it … It was so loud we thought it happened here. My house was shaking.” |
The office of the Daily Star newspaper, about 400 metres from the port, was among the buildings to sustain damage from the explosion. | The office of the Daily Star newspaper, about 400 metres from the port, was among the buildings to sustain damage from the explosion. |
Pictures from inside Beirut’s port broadcast on Lebanese TV showed buildings reduced to shells, shipping containers flung across the scene and several fires raging. | Pictures from inside Beirut’s port broadcast on Lebanese TV showed buildings reduced to shells, shipping containers flung across the scene and several fires raging. |
Lebanon’s health minister initially told journalists a ship carrying fireworks had blown up in the port, though the size of the blast raised suspicions it might have resulted from a rocket strike or detonation of explosives, deliberate or otherwise. | |
The Lebanese customs director-general, Badri Daher, said the blast occurred at a chemical warehouse in the port area that was housing highly explosive materials that had been impounded some time ago. | |
“Israel has nothing to do with the incident,” an Israeli security official told Reuters on condition of anonymity. Israel’s foreign minister, Gabi Ashkenazi, told Israeli N12 television news that the explosion was most likely an accident caused by a fire. | “Israel has nothing to do with the incident,” an Israeli security official told Reuters on condition of anonymity. Israel’s foreign minister, Gabi Ashkenazi, told Israeli N12 television news that the explosion was most likely an accident caused by a fire. |
More details soon … | More details soon … |