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Beirut explosion: death toll rises to 135 as about 5,000 people are wounded – live updates | Beirut explosion: death toll rises to 135 as about 5,000 people are wounded – live updates |
(32 minutes later) | |
Lebanese TV reports latest toll as government declares two-week state of emergency in Beirut after half the city damaged in blast | |
The Lebanese government has declared a two-week state of emergency, effectively giving the military full powers in the capital, after two huge explosions on Tuesday killed at least 135 people and injured around 5,000. | |
Lebanese prime minister Hassan Diab said the cause of the explosion was 2,700 tonnes of ammonium nitrate, a common industrial chemical used in fertiliser and as a component in mining explosives. | |
An initial investigation has reportedly found years of inaction and “negligence” around the removal of the ammonium nitrate is to blame for the blast. | |
The European Union has activated its civil protection system to round up emergency workers and equipment from member states. Governments worldwide have sent support, including Kuwait, Norway and Australia. | |
Beirut’s governor, Marwan Abboud, has said the damage from the port blast has extended over half of the city, with the cost of damage likely above $3bn. | |
Rescuers have continued to search for victims who remain trapped under rubble. In one video shared on Wednesday, a search team can be heard clapping and cheering as a survivor is pulled to safety. | |
Residents, desperate to reach their loved ones, are sharing pictures of missing relatives, as well as phone numbers online. | |
Hospitals, several of which were damaged in the blast, have been inundated with patients. In Gemmayze district, medical teams were forced to triage patients in a car park, while the Red Cross said it is coordinating with the Lebanese health ministry to set up morgues. | |
Aerial images from the scene of the explosion illustrate the impact of the blast, which destroyed crucial silos that contained around 85% of the country’s grain. Lebanon’s economy minister, Raoul Nehme, said the wheat in Beirut’s port granaries cannot be used and that the ministry lost track of seven employees in the granaries. | |
This before and after drone footage shows the scale of the devastation: | |
My colleague, Molly, has heard from a Beirut resident, who has given a distressing account of the minutes after the blast: | |
Timi, who was injured when the explosion wrecked the house she and her fiancé were inside, said the blast “was like a warzone movie”, and that she “really thought [she] was going to die”. | |
“We heard the first sonic boom - it was actually a smaller explosion but sounded like a sonic boom - and I knew something was deeply wrong,” she said. Timi, who lives in the Achrafieh district of Beirut, said she grabbed her fiancé seconds before “everything exploded around us”. | |
“We get blasted from the couch with glass and doors flying all around us. We were in an old Lebanese house next to hospital St George in Geitawi, the house was totalled,” she said. “I really thought I was going to die.” | |
Timi said she “huddled in the corner of the room”, which was covered with glass and blood, and began to pray. “I never pray, but I didn’t know what else to do to calm down,” she said. | |
“My fiancé’s mother was bleeding profusely, I also had gotten a cut on my arm from the broken glass. We were in complete shock and fear,” she said. “We wandered out of the house like lost ghosts. Going nowhere and mumbling and trembling, covered in dust and blood. | |
“It was unreal. It felt like I was in a bad dream where I was on mute and I couldn’t help anyone or myself,” Timi added. “Complete mental shock and disorientation. I didn’t take pictures because I was still under shock at the time, but at least we were overall ok (no major injuries). Some people were wounded very badly in the hospital. My heart goes out to them and their families.” | |
Lebanese news channel, Al Manar TV, is quoting the country’s health minister as saying the toll has now risen, with tens of people still missing. | Lebanese news channel, Al Manar TV, is quoting the country’s health minister as saying the toll has now risen, with tens of people still missing. |
More and more shocking videos of the blast and its effects are coming in. BBC Arabic journalist, Maryem Taoumi, was filming an interview when the shockwave hit. | More and more shocking videos of the blast and its effects are coming in. BBC Arabic journalist, Maryem Taoumi, was filming an interview when the shockwave hit. |
This video of a woman in Beirut playing Auld Lang Syne on the piano in her blasted-out living room is being circulated online. | This video of a woman in Beirut playing Auld Lang Syne on the piano in her blasted-out living room is being circulated online. |
The government has also approved the spending of 100bn Lebanese pounds to deal with the crisis. That is worth around $13m (nearly £10m) as the unofficial exchange rate has gone into a virtual freefall. | The government has also approved the spending of 100bn Lebanese pounds to deal with the crisis. That is worth around $13m (nearly £10m) as the unofficial exchange rate has gone into a virtual freefall. |
The Lebanese government has declared a two-week state of emergency, effectively giving the military full powers in the capital. | The Lebanese government has declared a two-week state of emergency, effectively giving the military full powers in the capital. |
The government announced the measure during a cabinet meeting, according to the Associated Press. | The government announced the measure during a cabinet meeting, according to the Associated Press. |
It confirmed earlier reports that the government was putting an unspecified number of Beirut port officials under house arrest pending an investigation into how 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate came to be stored at the port for years. | It confirmed earlier reports that the government was putting an unspecified number of Beirut port officials under house arrest pending an investigation into how 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate came to be stored at the port for years. |
Here are two astonishing videos from the blast. | Here are two astonishing videos from the blast. |
The first captures a priest ducking from what appears to be plummeting stained glass windows. | The first captures a priest ducking from what appears to be plummeting stained glass windows. |
This one, meanwhile, shows a bride posing as the shockwave hits the area. | This one, meanwhile, shows a bride posing as the shockwave hits the area. |
Our graphics team have worked up this excellent visual guide to give you an idea of the magnitude of the blast: | Our graphics team have worked up this excellent visual guide to give you an idea of the magnitude of the blast: |
Another charity working in Lebanon, Islamic Relief, has warned that the country was already in a very precarious position before Tuesday’s blast. | Another charity working in Lebanon, Islamic Relief, has warned that the country was already in a very precarious position before Tuesday’s blast. |
“This is yet another tragedy for a country that is already deep in crisis on multiple fronts,” said Nidal Ali, the group’s Lebanon director. | “This is yet another tragedy for a country that is already deep in crisis on multiple fronts,” said Nidal Ali, the group’s Lebanon director. |
“The economy is the worst it has been in decades, with nearly half the population living below the poverty line and 35% of people out of work. Many of Lebanon’s population are refugees who have struggled for a long time. But now even middle-class families have been fighting to put food on the table. For nearly a year, all people have been concerned with is, ‘how am I going to eat tomorrow?’” | “The economy is the worst it has been in decades, with nearly half the population living below the poverty line and 35% of people out of work. Many of Lebanon’s population are refugees who have struggled for a long time. But now even middle-class families have been fighting to put food on the table. For nearly a year, all people have been concerned with is, ‘how am I going to eat tomorrow?’” |
He adds: “In October last year, we had to put all our long-term programmes on hold and prioritise food parcels as the economic crisis became a humanitarian emergency.“This was all before the coronavirus pandemic brought the world to a standstill earlier this year. Lebanon has seen a spike in cases over recent weeks, and hospitals are overrun.” | He adds: “In October last year, we had to put all our long-term programmes on hold and prioritise food parcels as the economic crisis became a humanitarian emergency.“This was all before the coronavirus pandemic brought the world to a standstill earlier this year. Lebanon has seen a spike in cases over recent weeks, and hospitals are overrun.” |