/ 17 September 2004

Fuel pipeline explodes in Nigeria

Between 30 and 50 people were killed in an explosion at a fuel pipeline on the outskirts of the Nigerian commercial capital, Lagos, police said on Friday.

”Between 30 and 50 people were killed while siphoning fuel from a damaged pipeline,” Lagos police spokesperson Emmanuel Ighodalo said, giving a new toll from Thursday’s explosion at Imore village, a northern suburb of the city.

Witnesses had earlier said at least 12 people died in the blast.

Ighodalo said no arrests were made.

”Nobody was arrested because the victims were also the offenders. And you cannot arrest dead people.”

Earlier, witness Yinka Adamolekun said at least 12 people were killed when a vandalised portion of the pipeline was ignited by a spark from a generator used to power a boat allegedly used by the victims while stealing fuel.

”I saw them being loaded into vans and taken to a morgue,” he said.

Last week, the state police commissioner, Israel Ajao, paraded eight suspected fuel thieves arrested in the area.

More than 1 000 villagers suspected of stealing fuel in Jesse, in southern Delta state, were killed in 1998 following a fuel pipeline explosion.

Similar incidents have been recorded in several other parts of the country since then.

Hundreds of fuel and oil thieves have been arrested or interrogated in the past four years as the government launched a crackdown on them.

Some of them are being prosecuted for economic sabotage and stealing. — Sapa-AFP