Anonymous ID: c43228 Sept. 28, 2023, 4:20 a.m. No.19623812   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3896 >>4169 >>4409

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/an-explosion-following-a-lightning-strike-in-the-uzbek-capital-kills-1-person-and-injures-162/ar-AA1hnTnL?ocid

 

The Associated Press

An explosion following a lightning strike in the Uzbek capital kills 1 person and injures 162

1h

 

Apowerful explosion in the Uzbek capital, Tashkent, killed a teenage boy Thursday and injured at least 162 people following a fire caused by a lightning strike, Uzbekistan’s Ministry of Health said.

 

The Ministry of Emergency Situations said the explosion happened early in the morning at a warehouse in southern Tashkent but did not say what was inside it to cause the powerful blast which it said was attended by 16 fire crews.

 

Russian state media Tass later reported that the warehouse contained several dozen electric vehicles and batteries. It said that the explosion also caused minor damage to the nearby Quruvchilar subway station.

 

Video and photos posted on social media showed a fire and cloud of smoke that was visible across Tashkent, as well as apartments that had reportedly been damaged by the force of the blast.

 

Twenty-four people were hospitalized after the explosion and the remaining 138 were treated for their injuries and sent home according to the health ministry which added that Uzbekistan's leading medical specialists were treating the casualties.

Anonymous ID: c43228 Sept. 28, 2023, 4:56 a.m. No.19623896   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3904 >>4031 >>4169 >>4409

>>19623812

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12568907/Huge-explosion-rocks-Tashkent-airport-Uzbekistan.html

 

Uzbekistan explosion felt 20 miles away hits international airport: Mushroom cloud fireball hundreds of feet high 'triggered by detonating car batteries' kills one and injures 160

A warehouse at Tashkent Airport in Uzbekistan has exploded early this morning

Local reports describe a fireball hundreds of feet high destroying nearby homes

 

A powerful explosion in the capital city of Uzbekistan which was reportedly triggered by detonating electric car batteries has killed one person and injured 160 more.

 

The blast inside a huge customs warehouse close to the Tashkent International Airport could be heard 20 miles away, with nearby buildings destroyed and untold damage caused to the airfield.

 

A 15-year-old boy was tragically killed after a frame collapsed on his head as a result of the explosion. It is unclear how many people were in the warehouse when it exploded but authorities say 163 people were injured.

 

Shocking footage shows the impact of the 2.43am explosion as a fireball erupted hundreds of feet high lighting up the night sky of the ex-Soviet republic.

 

Initial reports suggested the raging inferno had been caused by a plane crash, forcing the authorities to deny this was responsible for the thunderous explosion that shook much of the city.

 

Dozens of ambulances ferries the wounded to hospitals. Some 24 people had been hospitalised, but faced no threat to their lives, while 138 were treated for injuries, the health ministry said.

 

At least five children suffered wounds from shattered glass.

 

The Uzbek Interior Ministry was initially reported as saying 'lightning struck a warehouse where electric cars and batteries were stored, causing a massive explosion and fire in Tashkent', said a report.

 

Later there were doubts that lightning had been a factor in the explosion.

 

Batteries for electric cars exploded at the airport warehouse, causing the destruction of the building in the shock wave, reported Mash media outlet.

 

There are suspicions explosives were also present in the Inter Logistics LLC warehouse given the scale of the blast, but this was officially denied.

 

Sixteen separate fire teams were seeking to extinguish the enormous blaze which covered more than 32,000 square feet.

 

Footage of the scene in the morning showed several locals inspecting their shattered windows and damaged homes, while smoke could still be seen rising as firefighters battled to control the blaze.

 

A social media post from Uzbek outlet Daryo said 16 fire and rescue crews were sent to fight the fire at one of the warehouses in the city's Sergeli district near the airport.

 

The blast wave was felt by residents of Nurafshan, a town south of Tashkent, some 20 miles from the epicentre of the explosion.

 

'In some social media, fake news spread that the incident in the Sergeli district was a result of a plane crash. This is an absolute lie,' said the Uzbek Emergencies Ministry.

 

The ministry later said it was working to establish full details of the cause of the explosion.

 

Flights at the airport appeared to be taking off and landing as normal, data from flight tracking website FlightRadar24 showed.

 

But notice to airmen issued at 10.15pm GMT yesterday said a runway at the airport would be closed for takeoff and landing between 2am and 7pm today, but a segment would be available for taxis. It did not provide a reason.

 

Uzbekistan is the most populous of the central Asian former Soviet republics, and fires attributed to dilapidated equipment and poor adherence to safety standards are common there.

 

Accidents of this magnitude, however, are still rare.

 

Uzbekistan is so hot rn