MALABO
- The death toll from a series of explosions in a military barracks in
Equatorial Guinea has risen to 98, the health ministry said Monday after
volunteers searched the rubble for bodies.
At
least 615 people were injured in the Sunday blasts, which started with a
fire at the Nkoantoma Military Base in the coastal city of Bata,
according to the defense ministry.
Citing
Vice President Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, the health ministry put
the death toll at 98, more than triple an earlier estimate of 31
killed.
Of the wounded, 299 remained hospitalized, the ministry wrote on Twitter.
President
Teodoro Obiang Nguema, the vice president's father, has attributed the
accident to negligence related to the handling of dynamite and said the
explosions damaged almost all homes and buildings in Bata, a city of
just more than 250,000 people.
Equatorial Guinea's health ministry posted on Twitter that it had prepared a mental health brigade made up of psychiatrists, psychologists and nurses to attend to the victims of the blast.
"The damages are not only physical but also mental," the ministry said.
Images
published by local media showed bodies wrapped in sheets and lined up
on the side of a road, with children being pulled from piles of broken
concrete and twisted metal.
Television station TVGE showed the vice president visiting a hospital where victims were being treated Monday.
The blasts come as Equatorial Guinea, an oil producer, is suffering a double economic shock because of the coronavirus pandemic and a drop in the price of crude oil, which provides around three-fourths of state revenue.
The former Spanish colony has been run by Obiang, Africa's longest-serving leader, since 1979.
The majority of the population of 1.4 million lives in poverty. The government has called for international support to help in the search and rescue effort and also in efforts to rebuild.
"Following
the devastating explosions in Bata yesterday... Spain will proceed with
the immediate dispatch of a shipment of humanitarian aid," Spanish
Foreign Minister Arancha Gonzalez Laya wrote on Twitter.
VOA