Afghan administrators are yet to be sure if the blasts were caused by a militant attack
Herat : At least 11 people, most of them children, were killed in a series of explosions at an Afghan gas storage facility, which triggered a massive inferno in a nearby settlement for displaced people, officials said on Tuesday. It was not immediately clear whether the blasts late on Mondy on the edge of the relatively peaceful western city of Herat were the result of an accident or caused by a militant attack.
“Around midnight (Monday) a gas tanker exploded which triggered blasts in a gas storage plant, killing 11 people and injuring 10 others,” Herat police spokesman Abdul Rauf Ahmadi told AFP. The explosions triggered a plume of flames into the night sky, which rapidly spread to a nearby settlement of mud houses for internally displaced people where most of the deaths occurred. Ihasanullah Hayat, spokesman for the governor of Herat, confirmed the toll and said the majority of those killed were children.
A resident of the hillside settlement, who lost a 9-year- old daughter in the fire, said many of the victims were trying to flee the towering flames. “The explosions were powerful and sparked a huge fire,” said the man, who had sought refuge in Herat after fleeing the neighbouring restive province of Badghis. “After the first explosion everyone started to flee the area and got caught up in the flames,” he added, reluctant to give his name.
Mourners gathered at the settlement for funeral prayers this morning, with turbaned pall bearers seen carrying bodies for burial on makeshift stretchers. Domestic gas cylinder explosions are an almost daily occurrence around the country, where safety standards are poor and fatal accidents not uncommon. Herat province, a key business hub located in western Afghanistan near the border with Iran, is a relatively peaceful province in a country convulsed by an ascendant 14- year Taliban insurgency.
But in May last year four insurgent gunmen launched a pre-dawn attack on India’s consulate in Herat before being repelled by security forces, in an assault highlighting the precarious security situation in the country. And at least four Afghans were killed in September 2013 in a Taliban suicide attack on the US consulate in the city. The Taliban are stepping up their summer offensive, launched in late April, amid a bitter leadership dispute following the announcement of the death of longtime leader Mullah Omar.
Meanwhile in a related evelopment, Taliban militants in Afghanistan’s Helmand province have sworn allegiance to Mullah Akhtar Mansour, the new chief of the Afghan militant movement, sources said on Tuesday. Video footage obtained by Geo News shows a large group of armed fighters gathered with Akhtar Mansour and swearing allegiance to the new leader.
According to the sources, the ceremony took place at an undisclosed location in Afghanistan’s Helmand province.
Akhtar Mansour, a trusted deputy of longtime Taliban leader Mullah Omar, was named as the new chief of the movement in late July in an acrimonious power transition.
Al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri recently pledged his group’s allegiance to Mansour, in a move which could bolster his accession amid reports of growing infighting within the Afghan militant movement.