LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) — A truck carrying fuel veered off the road into a ditch, caught fire and exploded in Nigeria’s oil-rich delta on Thursday, killing at least 95 people who had rushed to the scene to scoop fuel that had spilled, an official said, in a tragic reminder of how little of the country’s oil wealth has trickled down to the poor.
At least 50 others were injured in the incident in the southern Niger Delta region, said Rivers State spokeswoman Ibim Semenitari.
Witnesses said some charred corpses were still lying in the area hours after the explosion, including bodies the size of children.
“What did these small ones know about coming to scoop fuel?” wondered Alagoa Morris, coordinator at THE advocacy group Oil Watch Nigeria.
He said some women wailed at the scene of the explosion, desperately looking for their relatives. The location of some of the bodies suggested that they were trying to run away when fire consumed them, MR. Morris added.
“How can people who have enough to eat scoop oil that belongs to someone else?” Mr. Morris said. “It is poverty.”
The fuel truck was trying to avoid a head-on collision with buses when it swerved into the ditch Thursday morning, said Rivers State police spokesman Ben Ugwuegbulam. It then overturned, leaving its fuel to spill, and people immediately swarmed to the scene to collect some of it.
Yushau Shuaib, a spokesman for the West African country’s emergency management agency, said the 95 people were killed in the explosion that ensued. It was not immediately clear what had caused the fire that left the truck burned to ashes.
Despite decades as an oil-producing region, the majority of those living in the Niger Delta remain desperately poor and mostly without access to proper medical care, education or work. Anger over the situation on several occasions has driven young people to attack foreign oil firms based there and steal fuel from pipelines.
The crude that flows from the Niger Delta is the lifeblood of Nigeria’s economy. The OPEC member now pumps out about 2.4 million barrels of oil a day, making it Africa’s biggest producer. Production dropped drastically during the militant attacks that targeted pipelines and saw foreign workers kidnapped. A 2009 government-sponsored amnesty program saw many fighters lay down their arms and the violence largely stop.
The truck accident took place near Okogbe town, about 40 miles from Port Harcourt city, Nigeria’s oil capital in the delta — a region of swamps, mangroves and creeks roughly the same size as South Carolina. A pipeline and a filling station were near the accident site, but neither was affected.
President Goodluck Jonathan said in a statement he is “deeply saddened by the loss of many lives” caused by the explosion and “particularly distraught by the fact that once again, so many Nigerian lives have been lost in an avoidable fuel fire disaster.”
A photographer who was at the scene said that the accident occurred on a major East-West expressway that was being expanded. Construction workers, however, hadn’t yet reached the level where the accident occurred, which remained a single lane, often forcing vehicles racing head-on to seek avoiding each other.
Mr. Alagoa said the accident “would not have happened” if the road had two lanes there.
At least two contracts have been signed over the past six years to expand the expressway that runs through Niger Delta states, according to a government website. However, corruption often hinders or slows down road construction and maintenance projects.
Accidents are also common on Nigeria’s poorly maintained roads. Drivers often travel at high speed and overtake slower vehicles, leading to head-on collisions with high death rates.
“This tells a tragic story about the state of national infrastructure and the poverty of the people,” said Nnimmo Bassey, executive director of Environmental Rights Action.
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