DAILY NATION
Sunday December 11 2016

The shell of a car that was damaged in an explosion in Karai, Naivasha,
on December 10, 2016. PHOTO | SULEIMAN MBATIAH | NATION MEDIA GROUP
The number of people who died on Saturday evening when a truck
carrying inflammable substances rammed into several vehicles before
bursting into flames near Karai on the Nairobi-Naivasha Highway has
increased to 40, deputy county commissioner Isaac Masinde has said.
Witnesses at the scene said the driver of the tanker lost control and hit the other vehicle which created chain of knocks.
The accident on the busy highway, some 80 kilometres west of Nairobi created a horrible scene.
Four
victims of the Saturday night accident were taken to the Naivasha Mt
Longonot Medical Centre while two were treated and discharged. Two
others, according to the Clinical Officer at the facility Dalmas Otumba,
were taken to Nairobi hospital for specialised treatment.
According
to a preliminary police report released on Sunday morning, the truck
(registration number UAK 519C) hit a bump before its driver lost control
and rammed into a vehicle in front and other vehicles before it burst
into flames.
"The fire spread very fast burning 10
other vehicles. A General Service Unit (GSU) Land Cruiser registration
number GK B 961G was also burnt, killing the officers on board. Most
bodies were burnt beyond recognition," said the police report.
"At
the scene, two containers of premium bond substance said to be highly
flammable were recovered and suspected were among the items carried in
the truck," added the report.
Nation reporters
at the scene, on Sunday morning, counted 12 shells of burnt out
vehicles and confirmed there are two bumps at the section of the road
where the accident happened.
Transport PS Irungu
Nyakera, while addressing the media on Sunday morning at the scene, said
that nine police guns were also recovered and put the death toll at 33.
National
Disaster Management Unit boss Pius Maasai has advised those who lost
their loved ones to report at Naivasha Police station for assistance.
According to him, most of the bodies can be identified.
All the bodies, Mr Maasai said, will be taken to Naivasha mortuary.
The
Kenya Red Cross has set up an information desk at the Naivasha police
station where relatives have been urged to report their missing ones for
identification.

NTSA boss Francis Meja confirmed that 12 vehicles were burnt, adding that one was a PSV and the rest private.
The matatu was carrying 14 passengers, who all perished.
The
tanker, which was coming from Nairobi, was negotiating the hilly part
of the road, before knocking a matatu and exploded into flames.

MEDICS STRIKE
Earlier, a Kenya Red Cross official said rescuers had taken 30 bodies to Naivasha Sub-County Hospital Mortuary.
The accident happened on the fifth day of a national strike by doctors and nurses.

Karai is about five kilometres from Naivasha Sub-County Hospital, one of the facilities affected by the industrial action.
Doctors
have claimed the government must fulfill the conditions in the
Collective Bargaining Agreement signed in 2013; to increase their pay,
improve working conditions and hire more doctors to reduce workload.

On Saturday evening, nurses announced they had agreed on a return to work formula.
But
the final decision to call off the strike rests with the outcome of a
planned meeting of the National Executive Council of the Kenya National
Union of Nurses on Sunday.

Among the burnt vehicles was a pick-up truck carrying administration police officers that was heading to Nairobi.
Three of them are among the dead. Eight magazines of the guns they were carrying were recovered.
Mr Edwin Wafula, a survivor who suffered burns on his hand, told the Nation he was travelling to Nairobi in the company of four other people when their car caught fire.

“The fire caught cars on both sides of the road. The truck was coming from Nairobi, but those heading to the city were also burnt,” he said at the scene.
Rescue
workers from the Kenya Red Cross arrived at the scene moments later but
they are having a hard time because there is a snarl-up.
Mr
Peter Njoroge said he had been trailing the truck in his car when it
suddenly veered off its course to the lanes of oncoming vehicles. It
exploded shortly afterwards.
“I was a distance away and that enabled me to slow down and reverse,” he told the Nation.
“It was a huge explosion and other motorists had little chance to react.”

The highway, the main
artery that links the city to western Kenya, and on to neighbouring
countries of Uganda, Rwanda, Democratic Republic of Congo and South
Sudan.
It is considered by the World Health
Organization among the most dangerous roads to drive on. At least an
accident happens every three days.
Additional reporting by Eric Matara, Fred Mukinda, Aggrey Mutambo, Magdalene Wanja and Angira Zadock.
Read more: http://www.nation.co.ke/news/40-dead-after-tanker-bursts-into-flames/1056-3482072-hfbd0p/index.html
Read more: http://www.nation.co.ke/news/40-dead-after-tanker-bursts-into-flames/1056-3482072-hfbd0p/index.html
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