Contrary to information sent out by Lagos State officials
that yesterday’s explosion in the Apapa area of Lago scame from a gasoline
tanker explosion,SaharaReporters has now learned that the frightening event was
a car bombing. Two security sources disclosed that the explosion was apparently
carried out by a female suicide bomber and was aimed at igniting several
gasoline depots in the area.
Photo credit: Vanguard |
The 9.15 p.m.
explosion happened Tuesday on Creek Road near the Burma Road junction. One
security source said the explosion could have triggered a massive inferno and
inflicted a horrifying scale of casualties as well as damage to properties in
the Apapa area, which is both a residential area as well as the hub of economic
activities, including shipping, manufacturing, and storage of petrochemical products.
Our source said the suicide bomber apparently sought to
ignite a series of gas distribution plants and gasoline depots owned by
Folawiyo Energy some 150 meters away from the site of the explosion.
The Public Relations Officer of the Lagos State Emergency
Management Agency (LASEMA), Mr. Kehinde Adebayo, had told reporters that the
explosion was from a gasoline tanker. On their part, officials of the National
Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) told SaharaReporters that there was a major
fire outbreak on Commercial Road in Apapa on Tuesday morning. One official said
the fire raged between 4 a.m. and 8 a.m. before it was contained by
firefighters, adding that one federal firefighter was injured as he fought the
fire.
The Federal emergency officials said they were denied entry
to the scene of the car bomb and were excluded by Lagos officials from
participating in the rescue and recovery process, in an apparent move to hush
up the news of the bombing.
Even though LASEMA claimed that the 9.15 p.m. explosion was
a gas cylinder explosion at a facility owned by Folawiyo Energy Limited (FEL),
the management of the company issued a statement dissociating itself from the
claim. A statement signed by the company’s media consultant, Muyiwa Adekeye,
said the explosion did not happen on its premises.
An account by Vanguard newspaper that first pointed to
evidence of a car bombing suggested that Boko Haram militants might have
targeted the farm tank with highly inflammable material packed in a Mercedes
Benz car in order to avoid detection and cause grave damage.
Although the car exploded beside a loaded gasoline tanker,
the tanker did not catch fire.
The apparent car bomb will be the first in Lagos since the
Boko Haram insurgency entered its most violent stage in 2009.
Culled
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