At least 13 dead in Ghana after truck carrying mining explosives detonates
Truck was delivering explosives to gold mine run by Toronto-based company, police say
At least 13 people were killed and scores injured when a truck carrying explosives to a gold mine in western Ghana detonated Thursday, flattening a rural community, police said.
Smoldering timber and torn sheet metal marked where hundreds of houses had stood in Apiate, a settlement about 200 kilometres west of Accra, the capital. Thursday's blast left a crater roughly 20 metres wide. Doors and roofs were blown off other buildings, according to a Reuters reporter at the scene.
Rescue workers combed the site while excavators dug through the larger piles of dirt and debris. About 180 people were injured by the explosion, police said Friday.
"We've seen damage to lives and property here that is just indescribable," said Daniel Adu-Gyamfi, a student from a nearby mining college who came to volunteer with the response team.
"Yesterday … you could see human remains all over the place."
Cause of crash still under investigation
In a video apparently filmed by a bystander in Apiate, people can be seen walking toward a fire on the side of the road when a powerful explosion ripped through the settlement.
It was not immediately clear what caused the blast. Police said a motorcycle crashed into the truck, then caught fire, and a government statement suggested a roadside power transformer could have played a role.
The truck, owned by a company called Maxam, was transporting explosives to the Chirano gold mine, police said; Toronto-based Kinross Gold Corporation runs the Chirano mine.
Kinross said it planned to provide support to the response efforts and relief items to those affected. Maxam could not be reached for comment.
The transport of the explosives had followed proper procedure, and the truck had a police escort, Kwesi Ofori, director of public affairs for the Ghana Police Service, told reporters.
He said police are treating the site as a crime scene while they investigate, but did not provided further details.
Quick evacuation
The death toll could have been much worse.
There was a pause between the collision and the explosion, which gave the driver time to warn the community of the danger, said Ofori.
Teachers in a nearby school were among the first informed, and evacuated the children.
The driver "also announced to most community members to move out, including the moto rider," Ofori said.
The government earlier on Friday said the death toll was 17, mistakenly counting four people who are alive but in critical condition, he said.
In a visit to Apiate, near the towns of Bawdie and Bogoso, Vice-President Mahamudu Bawumia applauded the rescue efforts and said the government was working to set up temporary housing for those who lost their homes.
"We will learn lessons and those are going to be much later on. For now we are very concerned about how to complete this rescue effort," he said.