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Festival blast probed

Published: 17 Aug 2013 - 02:08 am | Last Updated: 03 Feb 2022 - 07:53 am


Investigators inspecting the explosion site at Fukuchiyama in Kyoto prefecture yesterday.

TOKYO: Japanese police yesterday were investigating the cause of an explosion at a fireworks festival which left at least 59 people injured including some with serious burns when it ripped through the crowded site.

Witnesses recounted seeing victims, including children, screaming as they rolled around on the ground to try to extinguish the flames, while the thousands who had gathered for the Thursday night festival fled in panic. 

The explosion is believed to have erupted at one of hundreds of snack counters lining a nearby riverbank at the festival, which is held annually outside the ancient capital of Kyoto and attracts upwards of 100,000 people.

Video footage showed the stalls, which had been selling drinks and food, going up in flames and sending smoke into the night sky, before a larger blast erupted.

Early accounts said the incident was believed to have been caused by a gas cylinder, but Jiji Press news agency said police suspect the fire may have started when a vendor added gasoline to a running power generator.

Koichi Tanimura, head of the local chamber of commerce which organised the festival, apologised for the accident at a press conference yesterday afternoon.

“I believe the vendor should be held responsible, but we also have a moral responsibility,” Japanese media quoted him as saying.

“I would like to apologise to those who were injured.”

Pictures from the scene showed charred snack booths and an abandoned baby stroller among the picnic blankets and clothing left behind after the crowd fled in the aftermath of the blast.

Of the 59 injured, at least 19 people suffered major burns and other serious injuries, according to police. One 10-year-old boy remained in intensive care yesterday. 

The fireworks display was cancelled after the incident. It was unclear how many spectators were in the immediate vicinity of the festival, which was held in Fukuchiyama city, about 70 kilometres (45 miles) north of Kyoto.

A 27-year-old male witness said that he saw the fire start near a jerry can sitting next to a generator at the back of a snack counter.

When a man, who appeared to be the vendor, opened the can’s lid, a hissing noise was heard just before a fire started, the Yomiuri said.

The police force’s serious crimes division was taking part in the joint investigation with firefighters as they probe the possibility of negligence resulting in the accident, he added.

AFP