KHARTOUM: Twenty-three people were killed and dozens injured as a fire triggered by an explosion in a gas tanker tore through a factory in the Sudanese capital on Tuesday, officials said. The factory had over 50 employees from India.
Thick plumes of black smoke billowed into the sky after the blaze broke out at a tile manufacturing unit in an industrial zone of north Khartoum, witnesses said.
“The explosion was loud. Several cars parked in the compound of the factory also caught fire,” an employee of an adjacent factory told AFP at the scene as firefighters doused the blaze.
The Indian embassy in Khartoum said reports indicated the factory employed over 50 Indian nationals. Its nationals were among the casualties, the embassy said on its website, without giving figures.
“A fire erupted in an industrial area because of which 23 people were killed and more than 130 injured,” the cabinet said in a statement.
“A blast in a gas tanker triggered the fire.”
Preliminary reports from the scene indicate that necessary safety equipment was missing at the site, it said.
“There were also inflammable materials improperly stored, which led to the spread of the fire,” the government said, adding that an investigation has been launched.
A doctor’s committee linked to Sudan’s protest movement said the casualties were taken to several hospitals and urged off-duty doctors to help out.