Smoke billows from MT Aces | White Star
Meer Hassan and Khudadad, two young men from Gadani, climbed the deck of MT Aces, an oil container berthed at one of the yards, late at night on October 30, 2016. They were to sleep there along with 14 other men so that they could start draining oil from the tank just below the deck, first thing in the morning. When the workers woke up the next day, some of them climbed down to get breakfast for themselves; others waited for them to return, collecting tools and preparing for a long day.
At about 9:40 am, they heard a rumble beneath their feet. Then the world around them went dark, covered in thick smoke. There were two explosions immediately afterwards — so loud that they were heard all over the coastline. Many heard the blasts and saw plumes of smoke emerging from the ship, but they could do little except watch from the distance as the ship burned — with an unknown number of workers trapped inside it.
The lone fire engine at the local fire station was too inadequate to put out the fire. Mohammad Aziz, who works as a firefighter at the station, recalls being at his home in a nearby village when he heard the blasts. He immediately rushed to the site of the accident and could see only chaos and destruction. The explosions had sent huge pieces of burning metal flying across many hundred metres. He spotted people trapped beneath them.
Many of the injured tell stories of shifting from one hospital to the other — mostly on government expense and in Edhi ambulances.
Workers on the deck flew through the air – some landing hard on the ground, others thrown into the sea – as a result of the blasts. Eyewitnesses say there were burnt bodies and severed limbs scattered as far as across the road from the yard.
Hassan and Khudadad survived; one with a broken leg and burns, the other with burns on his back and arms. They jumped off the ship into the shallow sea waters and swam to safety. So did their paternal cousins Tahir Abbas and Mohammad Fayaz – both natives of Muzaffargarh district – though in a more prolonged and painful way.
They were working in the engine room when the explosions took place. The ship shook, debris flew around them and the room was filled with dust. Abbas thought a cylinder had burst somewhere in the ship. Fayaz believed someone had attacked the vessel. They made their way to the deck, only to realise that a fire had engulfed the entire ship. The two tied a rope to a railing, flung it overboard and started climbing down the rope. Many others were doing the same. At one stage, Fayaz claims, there were many ropes hanging down from the ship with more than one person holding on to them.
Abbas remembers how he jumped into the sea but found no one nearby to rescue him. He swam to safety on his own after struggling with waves for thirty minutes. He was lucky to escape with just a broken finger.
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Fayaz and some others were reluctant to jump down. He could spot some launches coming towards the ship to rescue trapped workers (about 10 sent from Gadani fish harbour; one from a neighbouring yard). Due to heat and smoke, launch operators were finding it impossible to get near the ship. He shouted as loudly as he could to attract their attention. Fayaz says he swung around the side of the burning ship for nearly two hours. At around noon, a launch finally managed to come close to where he was and he jumped into it to reach the shore.
Many of the injured tell stories of shifting from one hospital to the other — mostly on government expense and in Edhi ambulances. None of them acknowledges having received any financial help or compensation from the employers or the yard owner.
Compensation or no compensation, they must count themselves lucky: they have fractured bones, burnt limbs and injured bodies but they are still alive. As many as 26 people were confirmed dead after the rescuers had finished their work two days later. Some remain missing even today.
One of the missing is 30-year-old Mohammad Shafique, a resident of New Karachi. He called his mother, Saira Bano, from a friend’s phone a day before the accident and promised to send her money. She has been waiting for any news about him since she heard of the accident, hoping for the best and fearing the worst. Shafique’s family has made several trips to different hospitals and Edhi centres around the city, looking for his body. Bano’s wait is not over yet.