AshmarkOlakunle gathered that a massive fire destroyed the arrivals
hall at Kenya's main international airport early Wednesday, forcing the
closure of East Africa's largest airport and the rerouting of all
inbound flights.
No injuries were reported, said Michael Kamau, the cabinet secretary for transport and infrastructure.
The fire broke out on the 15th anniversary of the U.S. Embassy
bombings in Nairobi and neighboring Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, but there
were no immediate signs of terrorism. Kenya's anti-terror police boss,
Boniface Mwaniki, told The Associated Press that he was waiting for the
fire to be put out so that he could inspect the scene before making a
judgment.
Dark black smoke that shot skyward was visible across much of Nairobi
as emergency teams battled the blaze. Passengers reported a slow
response by the under-resourced fire brigade, and the blaze raged for
four hours before being contained.
"It was huge, the smoke billowing, and it didn't seem to be
stopping," said Barry Fisher, who had hoped to fly to Ethiopia on
Wednesday morning.
The fire gutted the international arrivals hall, where passengers
pass through immigration and retrieve their luggage. The Kenya Airports
Authority closed Jomo Kenyatta International Airport until further
notice.
"We reassure international and local travelers that arrangements are
being put in place to restore normal operations. The airlines are
working to assist stranded passengers and advise them on the measures
being put in place to resume services at JKIA," said Stephen Gichuki,
the director of the Kenyan Airports Authority.
The Nairobi airport is the busiest in East Africa, and its closure is likely to affect flights throughout the region.
Kamau said the fire began at 5 a.m. in the immigration section of the
arrivals hall. Inbound flights were diverted to the coastal city of
Mombasa.
As in many countries in East Africa, public sector services like
police and fire units in Kenya are hobbled by small budgets and outdated
or no equipment. Many of the responding units to Wednesday's fire were
from private security firms.
A British passenger, Martyn Collbeck, said he was surprised that the
airport wasn't shut sooner so that emergency vehicles could respond.
"When I arrived there were one or two fire engines parked outside the
international arrivals. It spread very fast," said Collbeck, who had
been scheduled to fly back to London on an early morning KLM flight.
"There were a couple of explosions which I think were a couple of gas
canisters."
"I would have expected more fire engines to respond faster," he added.
There may not have been fire engines available to respond. The
country's largest newspaper, The Daily Nation, reported last month that
Nairobi County doesn't have a single working fire engine, and that three
fire engines were auctioned off in 2009 because the county hadn't paid a
$1,000 repair bill.
"It is a disgrace of biblical proportions that the entire Nairobi
County does not have a public fire engine in working condition," the
paper wrote in an editorial last month. "When (government leaders) were
debating their budgets, they did not deem it fit to set aside money
either to buy new ones or repair the old ones. But they did set aside
money to build mansions for governors, (buy) big vehicles for county
executives and other needs without a direct benefit to Kenyans."
The paper said the collapse of the fire department means responses to
disasters is in the hands of private companies and the military.
Fisher, a trade specialist who lives in Nairobi, described the scene as chaotic.
"There was no one stopping any traffic going to the road to the
airport," he said. "A number of fire trucks and ambulances were trying
to negotiate their way through the lane. ... They were trying to weave
their way through a solid two lanes of cars."
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