By Imad al-Khozaie
Reuters, 29 August 2006
NEAR DIWANIYA, Iraq - At least 29 people were killed when a blast ripped through scavengers siphoning petrol from pools around a breach in a disused pipeline in central Iraq late on Monday, health officials said.
A Reuters reporter at the rural site near Diwaniya, 180 km (110 miles) south of Baghdad, saw 15 charred and mutilated bodies, including that of a boy. The explosion wounded 26 people, who were taken to area hospitals with severe burns.
"Some of the wounded have burns in 75 percent of their bodies," Hamid Jaafi, a health official in Diwaniya told Reuters, adding the death toll is expected to climb.
Witnesses said the blast, which is under investigation, occurred at 11 p.m. (1900 GMT), while a group of impoverished people were scooping fuel from two large pools.
Despite having the world's third largest proven reserves of oil, Iraq is gripped by a fuel crisis blamed on sabotage attacks, aging infrastructure and rampart corruption.
Fuel prices have soared as the Iraqi government phases out subsidies under an International Monetary Fund deal.
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said the government was working to ease the crisis, a source of anger for Iraqis. Smuggling and a black market for petrol products are thriving.
"I bless the enormous efforts that (the Oil Ministry) has made in overcoming the fuel crisis that citizens are facing lately," he told reporters at the Oil Ministry in Baghdad. The government wants to liberalize import rules on fuel products.
CRATER
Mutilated and mud-caked bodies lay by one wide crater at least 10 meters (yards) wide. One witness said there were still bodies in the pools and under mud that had not been recovered.
A police source said more than 50 were killed, although that figure could not be confirmed.
"The government is to blame for this. It raised the prices of petrol and forced people to do these dangerous things," an elderly man told Reuters at the scene.
An Oil Ministry official in Baghdad said the pipe was one of many across Iraq that are out of operation due to the shortages. Residue left in the pipe could have caused the blast, he said.
The blast came one day after at least 20 Iraqi soldiers were killed in street fighting with Shi'ite militiamen in Diwaniya, in some of the bloodiest clashes among rival powers in Shi'ite southern Iraq.
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Citation: Imad al-Khozaie. "Explosion kills 29 petrol scavengers in Iraq," Reuters, 29 August 2006.
Original URL: http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2006-08-29T130836Z_01_MAC925159_RTRUKOC_0_US-IRAQ-PIPELINE.xml&archived=False
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