14 people were killed and 178 others injured after a powerful explosion and fire at the main fuel depot in Guinea rocked the centre of the capital Conakry early on Monday, December 18, causing substantial damage and bringing the city to a standstill.
Schools were closed and workers told to stay at home as thick black smoke filled the sky. Residents fled the area where the blast occurred, images on social networks showed.
The incident happened at the state oil company’s main depot in the Kaloum district of Conakry, near the port. The fire was brought under control in the afternoon, and of the injured treated by emergency services and in hospitals, 113 have been discharged, according to a government statement read on national television late Monday.
“We call solidarity and prayer for the nation in this difficult time while the results of an investigation ordered by the government are awaited.”
Colonel Mamady Doumbouya – head of the ruling junta, 2021
The government announced the closure of schools and urged workers to stay at home in Conakry and its surrounding area.
Security forces have blocked off the port district and a strong smell of burnt fuel hung in the air. A crisis unit coordinated by Security Minister Bachir Diallo has been set up. A health emergency plan is also in place to support the injured, the information ministry said.
Emergency rescue personnel from abroad, notably neighboring countries Senegal and Mali, are to arrive soon, Diallo said. The European Union and the United States have expressed their solidarity.
Service stations are temporarily closed across the country. An evacuation point for people living nearby has also been established at the parliament building, the government said.
The cause of the fire was unclear, officials said, and its “scale and consequences could have a direct impact on the population”.
Guinea has been ruled since September 2021 by a junta led by Doumbouya, who stormed the presidential palace with soldiers and overthrew civilian president Alpha Conde. Conde was Guinea’s first democratically elected president and took office in 2010 after decades of authoritarian rule. Doumbouya has promised to hand the reins of government back to elected civilians by January 2026.