File Photo: Two Ukrainian firemen were missing after a fire they had been battling through the night at a fuel depot outside Kiev triggered a powerful explosion on June 9, 2015.
Kryachki, Ukraine:
Ukraine urgently evacuated hundreds of residents today from the site of a series of fuel depot blasts near Kiev that set off a ferocious fire and left several people missing and at least one confirmed dead.
The defence ministry said it was also taking emergency measures to prevent the flames engulfing a nearby military airbase which has MiG-29 fighter jets and munitions on site.
Security Council Secretary Oleksandr Turchynov and Defence Minister Stepan Poltorak rushed to the scene to oversee the rescue operations.
"We are facing a serious threat because 50 metres (yards) from the edge of the fire, we have a military installation stocked with an arsenal," Turchynov said in televised comments.
The interior ministry said at least one person had perished in the conflagration in a leafy town called Vasylkiv about 30 kilometres (20 miles) southwest of Ukraine's capital Kiev.
Fourteen people - including seven rescue workers - were being treated for burns and other injuries.
The lightning speed with which the flames spread to neighbouring petrol stations and fuel tanks resulted in initial confusion among emergency workers and contradictory toll reports.
Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said officials were still trying to establish contact with three of the 30 firemen who were intially sent to the spot of the first blast.
But more explosions soon followed and dozens of additional firetrucks and ambulances were dispatched to the scene, where thick black smoke billowed into the sky.
An AFP reporter saw three underground fuel storage tanks on fire within a few hundred metres of the initial accident.
Videos posted on the Internet showed the force of the first explosion and the heatwave it produced setting ablaze several firetrucks and ambulances that had been rushed to the scene.
A fireman wearing a silver heat-resistant suit and mask was seen running away from the disaster for his own safety.
"Everyone leave. Whoever is still here, leave," one fireman said in a video.
Ukraine's emergencies ministry began evacuating residents living within two kilometres of the fuel depots.
"If necessary, we will evacuate people living within 10 kilometres (of the blast site)," the ministry statement added.
'Sabotage'
Kiev has been suffering from a dry heat spell that has seen temperatures soar towards 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees Fahrenheit) for more than a week.
Security Council chief Turchynov said the accident most likely resulted from human error and "safety rule violations".
"But the second possibility is sabotage," he added in televised comments.
The damaged fuel depots are owned by a Ukrainian company called BRSM-Nafta that operates a chain of petrol stations.
BRSM-NAfta spokesman Oleksandr Melnychuk told AFP that several explosive devices had been discovered near his company's storage tankers since last August.
"We view this as an attempt to put pressure on the company owner," Melnychuk said in a telephone interview.
"They wanted to nationalise (the company) , to take it away from us."
The defence ministry said it was also taking emergency measures to prevent the flames engulfing a nearby military airbase which has MiG-29 fighter jets and munitions on site.
Security Council Secretary Oleksandr Turchynov and Defence Minister Stepan Poltorak rushed to the scene to oversee the rescue operations.
"We are facing a serious threat because 50 metres (yards) from the edge of the fire, we have a military installation stocked with an arsenal," Turchynov said in televised comments.
The interior ministry said at least one person had perished in the conflagration in a leafy town called Vasylkiv about 30 kilometres (20 miles) southwest of Ukraine's capital Kiev.
Fourteen people - including seven rescue workers - were being treated for burns and other injuries.
The lightning speed with which the flames spread to neighbouring petrol stations and fuel tanks resulted in initial confusion among emergency workers and contradictory toll reports.
Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said officials were still trying to establish contact with three of the 30 firemen who were intially sent to the spot of the first blast.
But more explosions soon followed and dozens of additional firetrucks and ambulances were dispatched to the scene, where thick black smoke billowed into the sky.
An AFP reporter saw three underground fuel storage tanks on fire within a few hundred metres of the initial accident.
Videos posted on the Internet showed the force of the first explosion and the heatwave it produced setting ablaze several firetrucks and ambulances that had been rushed to the scene.
A fireman wearing a silver heat-resistant suit and mask was seen running away from the disaster for his own safety.
"Everyone leave. Whoever is still here, leave," one fireman said in a video.
Ukraine's emergencies ministry began evacuating residents living within two kilometres of the fuel depots.
"If necessary, we will evacuate people living within 10 kilometres (of the blast site)," the ministry statement added.
'Sabotage'
Kiev has been suffering from a dry heat spell that has seen temperatures soar towards 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees Fahrenheit) for more than a week.
Security Council chief Turchynov said the accident most likely resulted from human error and "safety rule violations".
"But the second possibility is sabotage," he added in televised comments.
The damaged fuel depots are owned by a Ukrainian company called BRSM-Nafta that operates a chain of petrol stations.
BRSM-NAfta spokesman Oleksandr Melnychuk told AFP that several explosive devices had been discovered near his company's storage tankers since last August.
"We view this as an attempt to put pressure on the company owner," Melnychuk said in a telephone interview.
"They wanted to nationalise (the company) , to take it away from us."
Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world