At Least 120 Dead in Kenyan Pipeline Blast

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At least 120 people were burned to death on Monday when a pipeline burst into flames in a Nairobi slum as local people were siphoning fuel from it, and more than 100 were injured, officials said.

Scores of bodies, some burned to the bone, lay on charred grass near trenches and a filthy river in the Sinai slum following the accident.

United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon expressed sorrow and sympathy for the victims.

"The United Nations stands in solidarity with the people of Kenya at this difficult moment," said a statement issued by his office, wishing those hospitalized a speedy recovery.

No official explanation has been given as to what caused the accident along the pipeline that runs through Sinai's tin shacks.

However, some residents said fuel siphoning in the slum was a common practice.

"It happens whenever the Kenya Pipeline (company) is pumping fuel ... we usually go to get fuel from there," said Francis Munge.

"There are people who know how to open it (a valve) and I don't know what happened this time for it to burst. Maybe there was a lot of pressure."

Another resident, Kenneth Makau, said: "There is usually a long queue of people getting fuel with jerrycans from that pipeline. It is an open secret because even they (the company) know it very well. It has been happening."

"The death toll from bodies counted so far is 120. It is likely to rise because of the bodies in the river," said Philip Kisia, a Nairobi city council official.

Richard Lesiampe, the head of one of the country's main hospitals in Nairobi, said 109 people were being treated for burns.

Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila Odinga expressed sympathy with the victims.

"It is a terrible, terrible situation. It is sad to see our people lose their lives like this," Odinga said as he toured the slum.

Some of those whose clothing and hair caught fire jumped into a nearby stream to try to extinguish the flames, but many succumbed to their injuries in the water. Police later placed a net across the stream to prevent the bodies from drifting away.

Bystanders covered their mouths to avoid choking on the acrid smoke. Firefighters in protective clothing sprayed chemical foam to try to contain the fire, while police and soldiers cordoned off the area and pushed people back.

Houses close to the pipeline were also engulfed in flames, their tin roofs buckling and disintegrating and their badly burned residents evacuated for medical care.

Local televisions said scores of burn victims had been taken to hospital, and showed footage of the injured being ferried away by ambulance.

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