News
SAD! Over 150 Injured In India’s Temple Firework Explosion
Indian police detained two people Tuesday after a temple fireworks show erupted into a ferocious explosion, leaving almost a hundred people in hospital, eight in a critical condition.
Hundreds were crowded around a Hindu temple at Nileshwaram in the southern state of Kerala on Monday evening to watch the fireworks, videos posted by Indian newspapers showed.
Then, from inside a building, a surge of crackles can be heard, before a powerful ball of flame surges high into the sky.
“Around eight people are critical, and around 154 have been reported injured, out of which 97 people are admitted in hospital,” local police chief Shilpa Dyavaiah told AFP.
“They burst firecrackers very close to the place where they have stored the firecrackers,” Dyavaiah said, adding that sparks from the burst crackers reached the cache.
Indian media reports, citing officials, said the blaze caused burns to the faces and hands of those in tightly packed crowd.
Local government official K. Inbasekhar said no permission had been given for the fireworks show.
Vendors display idols of Hindu deities Ganesha and Laxmi ahead of Diwali, the festival of lights, along a street in Amritsar on October 28, 2024. (Photo by Narinder NANU / AFP)
The temple president and secretary had been taken into custody, The Hindu newspaper reported.
Religious gatherings in India have a grim track record of deadly incidents caused by safety lapses and poor crowd management.
In 2016, at least 112 people were killed after a huge explosion caused by a banned fireworks display at a temple marking the Hindu New Year.
A girl sells earthen lamps ahead of Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights, at a market in Amritsar on October 28, 2024. (Photo by Narinder NANU / AFP)
India is readying for its major fireworks season, a traditional celebration for the Hindu festival of lights, Diwali, later this week.
The spectacular and colourful festival celebrates the Hindu goddess Lakshmi and symbolises the victory of light over darkness.
Border Security Force (BSF) personnel with their children buy firecrackers ahead of Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights, during a fair in Amritsar on October 27, 2024. (Photo by Narinder NANU / AFP)
The fireworks also spew hazardous acrid smoke, and the capital New Delhi has banned firecrackers to curb hazardous air pollution.
Police are often reluctant to act against violators, given the strong religious sentiments attached to the crackers by Hindu devotees.
AFP
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Reps Quiz Federal Polytechnics Damaturu, Mubi, Monguno Over Infractions
By Gloria Ikibah
News
Obasanjo narrates how he escaped becoming drug addict
Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has revealed how he almost became a drug addict.
He spoke in Abeokuta over the weekend at the second edition of ‘Fly Above The High’ anti-drug campaign conference organised by the Recovery Advocacy Network.
Obasanjo stated that smoking during his youthful age led to chronic coughing and almost became an addiction.
The former President, while lamenting the increase in drug abuse among Nigerians and other West Africans, urged Nigerian students and young people to refrain from abusing psychoactive drugs, saying that they ruin life rather than enhance it.
“If I had persisted, I could have become addicted. Once you get involved, it is difficult to get out.
“There’s nothing drug can do for you except destruction.
“We found out that West Africa has equally been a centre for drug consumption in a very bad way. That was more than 10 years ago, so the situation has since gone worse. And whatever applies to West Africa applies to all other parts of Africa,” Obasanjo said.
He cautioned against stigmatization and urged individuals who are already addicted to psychoactive drugs to get help.
News
We saved $20bn after Petrol Subsidy Removal and FX Rate Reforms, Says Finance Minister
Wale Edun, minister of finance and coordinating minister of the economy, says Nigeria has saved $20 billion from petrol subsidy removal and market-based pricing of the foreign exchange rate.
Edun spoke at a ceremony recently held to mark the first 100 days in office of Esther Walso-Jack, head of civil service of the federation, in Abuja.
“An amount of five per cent of GDP is what those two subsidies were costing when there was a subsidy on PMS; when there was petroleum product generally for a long time and when there was a subsidy of foreign exchange. Between them, they were costing five percent of GDP,” he said.
“If you say GDP was on average, let’s say $400 billion. We all know what five percent of that is – $20 billion of funds that could be going into infrastructure, health, social services, education.”
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