At least 13 people have died after a petrol tanker overturned and caught fire in western Kenya on Sunday night.
The crash reportedly happened as the driver tried to avoid a head on collision with another lorry on the busy road between Kisumu and Busia.
People rushed to the scene with jerry cans to siphon off the fuel from the overturned tanker when it exploded.
Around 11 people, including children, are in hospital in a critical condition after suffering severe burns.
It took two hours for firefighters to reach the scene, near the town of Malanga in Siaya County – about 315km (195 miles) north-west of the capital, Nairobi.
“We could not get a fire engine from Siaya County since it is in Nairobi,” local police chief Moreso Chacha said.
Fire crews came from a neighbouring county to help, he said.
A lorry carrying milk was travelling from Busia, near the Ugandan border, to Kisumu when it collided with the petrol tanker going in the opposite direction, the police commander explained.
Road accidents are not unusual in the East Africa nation, where lorries and other vehicles often speed along single carriage highways – some unlit at night, says the BBC’s Mercy Juma in Nairobi.
About 3,000 people die in road collisions in Kenya each year.
Kenyan Mary Wambui is still traumatised by the deaths of her daughter and three-year-old grandson after they were hit by a vehicle in 2016.
They were trying to cross a busy six-lane highway close to Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, when the accident happened.
Ms. Wambui’s daughter, Monicah Nyambura, died on the spot, but her grandchild, Brian, who was badly injured, spent much of the following year in hospital before he too died.
They were just two of the almost 3,000 people who were killed that year on Kenya’s roads, where safety rules are often poorly observed.
Deaths and injuries from traffic accidents across the continent are considered to be a major health issue by the World Health Organisation (WHO). -BBC
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