Nigeria’s president has said the country was in “shock and trauma” following the deaths of at least 100 people from an explosion at an illegal oil refinery.
President Muhammadu Buhari described the incident in Imo state, southern Nigeria, as a “catastrophe and a national disaster”.
Many victims were burnt beyond recognition.
The police were now looking for the owner of the illegal refinery.
The damage to fishing and farming caused by the oil industry over the decades and the failure to share the oil wealth has led some to find other ways to make money.
Illegal refining was attractive as parts of the oil-rich Niger Delta was seen as being relatively easy to pull off, despite efforts to halt the practice.
Dozens of people were thought to have been working at the refining plants when they were caught in the huge fire.
The death toll has risen as emergency workers went through the scene. Ifeanyi Nnaji of the National Emergency Management Agency told BBC Igbo that the death toll now stood at 109.
“We learnt many bodies are in nearby bushes and forests as some illegal operators and their patrons scampered for safety,” he earlier told the AFP news agency.
Charred human remains, as well as fragments of belongings, such as flip flops, bags and clothing, were witnessed across the scene of the disaster by a journalist for the Reuters news agency.
In a statement on Sunday, Mr Buhari offered his condolences to families of the victims and said those responsible for the explosions must be caught and brought to justice.
The authorities have been struggling to curb the proliferation of illegal plants where stolen crude oil was refined. The president ordered security forces to intensify efforts to shut such refineries.
It is unclear what caused the explosion that happened sometime overnight into Saturday, but accidents have been common in the past at similar dangerous sites, where safety measures were not enforced.
There have been concerns over lack of precautions at such facilities as well as the environmental pollution they caused.
But Nigeria’s official oil refineries do not work to capacity, causing frequent fuel shortages and price increases across the country.