Behind Nigeria’s Fuel Tanker Explosion, a Fatal Quest for Cheap Gasoline

By The New York Times (Africa) | Created at 2024-10-17 20:14:59 | Updated at 2024-10-18 08:35:00 12 hours ago
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Africa|Behind Nigeria’s Deadliest Road Incident in Years, a Quest for Cheap Fuel

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/17/world/africa/nigeria-fuel-tanker-explosion-jigawa.html

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More than 160 people died when an overturned fuel tanker in northern Nigeria exploded. Witnesses and relatives of victims said poverty had driven most to try to collect the spilled gas.

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The deadly blast happened as crowds gathered around an overturned vehicle to collect spilled fuel.CreditCredit...Sani Maikatanga/Associated Press

By Ismail Auwal and Elian Peltier

Ismail Auwal reported from the site of the explosion in the town of Majia, northern Nigeria.

Oct. 17, 2024, 4:10 p.m. ET

The driver of a fuel tanker was transporting 45,000 liters of gasoline on an unlit road in northern Nigeria on Tuesday night when a van carrying tomatoes veered into his lane. The driver lost control of his vehicle as he tried to avoid the van.

The tanker capsized.

The driver, Yusuf Mohammad, emerged from the truck uninjured, as did the driver of the van. But within minutes, hundreds of residents swarmed around the overturned tanker to scoop up the spilled gasoline, an increasingly expensive and scarce commodity in Nigeria.

The decision cost them their lives. The tanker exploded an hour later and killed 168 people in the state of Jigawa, according to emergency officials. It was one of the deadliest road accidents ever recorded in Nigeria. Over 90 others remained hospitalized as of Thursday evening.

On Thursday, mourners circled around the area where most of the victims had been buried in the town of Majia, 70 miles away from Nigeria’s second-largest city, Kano.

A map of Nigeria highlighting the town of Majia.

Niger

Chad

Majia

Kano

Benin

Nigeria

Abuja

Lagos

Cameroon

200 miles

The burned tanker, covered in soot, still lay on its side, just yards away from the burial and charred crops of sorghum.


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