RESCUE operations on Thursday (5) continued at a firecracker factory site in India’s Punjab state where 23 people were killed and 27 injured in a powerful explosion, officials said.
Teams of National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) were trying to find out any person still trapped under the debris, they said.
Twenty-three people were killed in a blast at the firecracker factory located in a residential area on Jalandhar road in Batala of Gurdaspur district on Wednesday (4) around 16.00 IST.
The explosion had also damaged buildings nearby, shattering window panes and even bringing down the roofs of a couple of them.
The explosion was heard kilometres away, local residents said.
Several factory workers, some family members of the factory owner and a few passersby were killed in the explosion, officials said. Seven critically injured were referred to Amritsar medical college.
After the post mortem, the bodies will be handed over to the families of victims, they said.
Meanwhile, tempers ran high at civil hospital where some family members of victims sought action against those officials for failing to ensure closure of the firecracker factory despite repeated requests.
They also raised slogans against the district administration. Significantly, in 2017, a blast had taken place in the same factory, locals said while claiming several complaints were submitted to the district administration in the past for the closure of the factory, but to no avail.
Batala senior superintendent of police Opinderjit Singh said the exact cause of the blast could be ascertained after the probe.
A forensic team from Chandigarh will soon reach the site to take samples, officials said. Punjab government has already ordered a magisterial inquiry into the incident.
Rural development and panchayat minister Tript Rajinder Singh Bajwa on Wednesday night met the injured in the local hospital.
An ex gratia of Rs 200, 000 for the kin of the each deceased and Rs 50,000 for the each of the seven severely injured had already been announced.
The impact of the blast was such that a few nearby buildings were damaged. Some four-wheelers were also damaged because of the impact.
The explosion was heard a few kilometres away, locals said. Punjab chief minister Amarinder Singh on Wednesday had directed both the civil and police administration to extend all possible help to the victims' families in this hour of grief.
He had also directed the deputy commissioner to provide the best possible treatment to the injured free of cost besides asking the SSP to supervise the evacuation operations being carried out by the NDRF team.
(PTI)
Clifford had previously denied killing Carol Hunt, 61, the wife of horseracing commentator John Hunt, and their daughters, Louise Hunt, 25, and Hannah Hunt, 28. (Photo: Hertfordshire Police /Handout via REUTERS)
Man pleads guilty to crossbow murders of BBC presenter’s family
A 26-YEAR-OLD man on Wednesday pleaded guilty to murdering two daughters of a BBC sports commentator and stabbing to death their mother in a crossbow attack.
Kyle Clifford had previously denied killing Carol Hunt, 61, the wife of horseracing commentator John Hunt, and their daughters, Louise Hunt, 25, and Hannah Hunt, 28.
However, appearing via video link at Cambridge Crown Court in eastern England, Clifford changed his pleas.
The court heard that Clifford tied up Louise Hunt, his former partner, binding her arms and ankles with duct tape before shooting her in the chest with a crossbow at the family home last July.
He pleaded guilty to three counts of murder, one count of false imprisonment, and two counts of possessing offensive weapons. However, Clifford denied raping Louise.
The murders took place at the family home in the commuter town of Bushey, near Watford, northwest of London.
Clifford was arrested in July following a manhunt after the bodies of the three women were discovered.
(With inputs from AFP)