Over
2,500 were reported injured as the explosion sent shockwaves across the city,
shattering windows and causing apartment balconies to collapse.
Dozens
of people died in Tuesday’s huge Beirut explosion in a port warehouse district
near the centre of the Lebanese capital.
It
also damaged the residence of the Lebanese President. Lebanese
health minister, gave an interim death toll of 50.
Officials
expected the death toll to rise sharply as emergency workers dug through rubble
across a swathe of the city to rescue people and remove the dead.
It
was the most powerful blast to hit Beirut in years, making the ground tremble.
“What
we are witnessing is a huge catastrophe,” the head of Lebanon’s Red Cross
George Kettani told broadcaster Mayadeen.
“There
are victims and casualties everywhere – in all the streets and areas near and
far from the explosion.”
Three
hours after the blast, which struck shortly after 6 p.m. (1500 GMT), a fire
still blazed in the port district, casting an orange glow across the night sky
as helicopters hovered and ambulance sirens sounded across the capital.
A
security source said victims were being taken for treatment outside the city
because Beirut hospitals were already packed with wounded.
Red
Cross ambulances from the north and south of the country and the Bekaa valley
to the east were called in to cope with the huge casualty toll.
The
blast was so big that some residents in the city, where memories of heavy
shelling during the 1975 to 1990 civil war live on, thought an earthquake had
struck.
Dazed,
weeping and, wounded, people walked through streets searching for relatives.
Lebanon’s
interior minister said initial information indicated highly explosive material,
seized years ago, that had been stored at the port had blown up.
The
minister later told Al Jadeed TV ammonium nitrate had been in storage there
since 2014.
Footage
of the explosion shared by residents on social media showed a column of smoke
rising from the port district followed by an enormous blast, sending a ball of
white smoke and fireball into the sky. Those filming the incident from high
buildings 2 km (more than a mile) from the port were thrown backwards by the
shock.

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