State-owned AlMamlaka TV broadcast footage showing the toxic gas cloud at Jordan's Aqaba portALMAMLAKA TV
Video broadcast by state-owned AlMamlaka TV showed the dock engulfed in a cloud of yellow gas

 


A leak of toxic chlorine gas at Jordan’s Red Sea port of Aqaba has killed 11 people and injured more than 250 others, state media report.

Authorities said a chemical storage container fell while being transported as a result of a crane malfunction.

CCTV footage showed the container being hoisted into the air and then suddenly dropping on to a ship and exploding.

A large cloud of bright yellow gas is seen spreading across the ground, sending people running for safety.

State media said 199 of the injured were being treated at local hospitals for chemical exposure. Some were reportedly in a critical condition.

Chlorine is a chemical used in industry and in household cleaning products. It is a yellow-green gas at normal temperature and pressure, but is usually pressurised and cooled for storage and shipment.

When chlorine is inhaled, swallowed or comes into contact with skin, it reacts with water to produce acids that damage cells in the body. Inhaling high levels of chlorine causes fluid to build up in the lungs – a life-threatening condition known as pulmonary oedema.

Damaged chemical storage container next to a vessel at Aqaba port in Jordan (27 June 2022)AFP
The container was filled with between 25 and 30 tonnes of chlorine being exported to Djibouti

 

Residents of Aqaba city, which is 16km (10 miles) north of the port, were advised to stay inside and close windows and doors following the leak.

Aqaba’s southern beach, which is only 7km away and is a popular tourist destination, was also evacuated as a precaution, AFP news agency reported.

The Civil Defence Department sent specialist teams to the port to deal with the leak and clean-up operation.

Prime Minister Bisher al-Khasawneh flew to Aqaba and ordered Interior Minister Mazen Faraya to oversee an investigation into the incident.

The deputy director of Aqaba’s port told AlMamlaka TV that an “iron rope” carrying the container “broke” while it was being loaded on to a vessel.

The container was filled with between 25 and 30 tonnes of chlorine and was being exported to Djibouti.

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