28.8 C
Singapore
Monday, April 28, 2025
spot_img

Update: Death Toll From Blast At Iran’s Bandar AbbasPortRises To 40

Must read

Saturday’s blasttook place in the Shahid Rajaee section of theport, Iran’s biggest container hub, shattering windows for several kilometers around, tearing metal strips offshippingcontainers and badly damaging goods inside, state media said.

The incident occurred as Iran held athird round of nuclear talkswith the United States in Oman.

Fires kept breaking out in different parts of the affected area as of Sunday night, according to state media, with helicopters and fire fighters continuing efforts to extinguish them.

Chemicals at theportwere suspected to have fueled the explosion, but the exact cause was not clear and Iran’s Defence Ministry denied international media reports that the blast may be linked to the mishandling of solid fuel used for missiles.

A spokesperson for the ministry told state TV the reports were “aligned with enemy psyops,” saying that the blast-hit area did not contain any military cargo.

The Associated Press cited British security firm Ambrey as saying theportin Marchhad receivedsodium perchlorate, which is used to propel ballistic missiles and whose mishandling could have led to the explosion.

The Financial Times newspaper reported in January theshipment of two Iranian vesselsfrom China containing enough of the ingredient to propel as many as 260 mid-range missiles, helping Tehran to replenish its stocks following its direct missile attacks on its arch-foe Israel in 2024.

DEADLY INCIDENTS

Plumes of black smoke rose above the site on Sunday and pieces of twisted metal and debris lay scattered across the blast site.

By early afternoon, the head of Iran’s Red Crescent Society told state media the fire was 90% extinguished and officials saidportactivities had resumed in unaffected parts of Shahid Rajaee.

A spokesperson for the country’s crisis management organization appeared on Saturday to blame the explosion on poor storage of chemicals in containers at Shahid Rajaee, adding that earlier warnings had highlighted potential safety risks.

Government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani cautioned against “premature speculation,” saying final assessments would be shared after investigations.

Negligence has often been blamed in a series of deadly incidents that have hit Iranian energy and industrial infrastructure in recent years.

“Did we really have to hold the container here for 3-4 months… until we had 120-140 thousand containers stored in this place?,” Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian said after arriving in Bandar Abbas on Sunday.

Incidents in the countryhave includedrefinery fires, agas explosionat a coal mine, and an emergency repairincidentat Bandar Abbas that killed one worker in 2023.

Iran has blamed some other incidents on Israel, which has carried out attackson Iranian soiltargeting Iran’s nuclear program in recent years and last year bombed the country’s air defenses.

(Reporting by Elwely Elwelly, Dubai Newsroom Editing by Bernadette Baum and Helen Popper)

spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

More articles

spot_img
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Latest article