Gas line blast leaves 10m-deep crater
- Admin UKK
- Berita
The gas pipeline blast in Putra Heights yesterday left a crater with a depth of 10m, says Subang Jaya police chief Wan Azlan Wan Mamat.
Wan Azlan said the crater’s width measured about 21m by 24m, Bernama reported.
The fire and rescue department sent a team at 3.30pm to inspect the crater, along with officers from Petronas, the occupational safety and health department, and minerals and geoscience department.
“In addition to the inspection of the affected area, we have also deployed a team from Petronas to monitor all four gas pipeline valves on-site, manually checking to ensure that no gas pressure remains,” said fire and rescue department director-general Nor Hisham Mohamad.
“This process is being conducted around the clock, 24 hours a day,” he added.
The fire, which broke out yesterday morning along Jalan Putra Harmoni, engulfed a 500m section of a gas pipeline, leaving 111 people injured — with many requiring hospitalisation for burns and respiratory issues.
A total of 399 vehicles were affected, with 225 burnt and 174 damaged. Some 538 residents from 120 families have also been forced to seek shelter at two temporary relief centres.
SUBANG JAYA – Kerajaan Selangor mengambil langkah proaktif bagi memastikan keselesaan mangsa insiden kebakaran paip di Putra Heights dengan mencari penyelesaian penempatan lebih baik selain pusat pemindahan sementara (PPS).
Menurut Ahli Majlis Mesyuarat Kerajaan Negeri Selangor, Mohd Najwan Halimi, kerajaan negeri akan berbincang dengan pelbagai pihak, termasuk Petronas, bagi memastikan mangsa ditempatkan di lokasi lebih sesuai dan selesa.
Beliau menyuarakan kebimbangan apabila sesi persekolahan akan bermula minggu depan serta ibu bapa yang perlu kembali bekerja, PPS mungkin tidak dapat menyediakan keselesaan jangka panjang kepada mangsa.
“Saya akan berbincang dengan Menteri Besar serta agensi berkaitan untuk mencari penyelesaian terbaik bagi memastikan kesejahteraan mangsa,” katanya ketika ditemui pemberita semasa lawatan ke PPS Putra Heights di sini pada Rabu.
Terdahulu, kebanyakan mangsa kebakaran paip gas yang ditempatkan di PPS Masjid Putra Heights meluahkan rasa syukur kerana menerima layanan baik serta kemudahan mencukupi.
Sehingga jam 3 petang Rabu, seramai 323 mangsa daripada 84 keluarga telah dipindahkan ke PPS bagi mendapatkan perlindungan sementara.
Menurut seorang mangsa warga emas, Yaacob Yusof, 74, walaupun masih terkejut dengan kejadian yang berlaku, mereka bersyukur kerana diberikan tempat tinggal selesa serta bantuan makanan dan keperluan asas.
Pihak berkuasa bersama badan bukan kerajaan (NGO) turut turun padang bagi memastikan semua mangsa menerima bantuan sewajarnya.
Sementara itu, siasatan mengenai punca kebakaran masih diteruskan bagi mengelakkan kejadian serupa berulang.
Gempa bumi sederhana landa Jepun
- Admin UKK
- Berita
KUALA LUMPUR – Gempa bumi sederhana berukuran 5.0 pada Richter direkodkan berlaku di Kepulauan Ryukyu, Jepun pada jarak 93 kilometer (km) timur dari Naha pada pukul 7:59 pagi tadi.
Jabatan Meterologi Malaysia (MET Malaysia) melaporkan, pusat gempa itu terletak pada kedalaman empat km dengan koordinat 26.0 darjah utara dan 128.6 darjah timur.
Bagaimanapun, katanya, gempa bumi itu tidak menyebabkan ancaman tsunami kepada Malaysia. – MalaysiaGazette
‘We escaped with nothing’: Putra Heights gas pipeline fire victims appeal for urgent supplies
- Admin UKK
- Berita
KUALA LUMPUR, April 2 — Apart from initial medical aid, families of the victims of yesterday’s gas pipeline fire in Putra Heights, Subang Jaya, are appealing for essential supplies such as clothing and food.
A family member of one of the victims, Mohd Rusman Mohamad Nasir, said most of the victims’ homes were completely destroyed, leaving them with no time to save any personal belongings.
“The zakat authorities, the Sri Serdang state assemblyman’s office, and a fast-food company (McDonald’s) have provided initial aid at Masjid Nurul Iman and Masjid Putra Heights, including medical assistance. But if we could also get clothing and undergarments, that would help,” he told Bernama at Sultan Idris Shah Hospital in Serdang.
Meanwhile, Rohanawati Ismail, the mother of one of the victims, said her eldest child, 28, had managed to call her when the fire broke out.
“She called to tell me the house was on fire and that the flames were coming from the kitchen, not from a gas cylinder, but from the gas pipeline. At that moment, they only had time to run out with nothing but the clothes on their back,” she said, also expressing hope for assistance with basic necessities.
An Indonesian victim, Rusman Abdul Samad, who was at the hospital accompanying an injured friend, described the heat during the incident as unbearable.
“I thought a plane was flying overhead because the noise was loud, like an aircraft engine, but when I stepped outside, I saw massive flames from a gas leak,” he said.
Meanwhile, Masayuan Takbir, 38, who was met after receiving treatment at the Emergency and Trauma Department of Putrajaya Hospital, told Bernama she was still traumatised by the incident.
She said she had to flee with her two children while her husband was at work at the time.
“Without thinking about anything else, I rushed out of the house with my two children, aged nine and two, through the back door in the kitchen, fearing that the situation could worsen,” she said, adding that she was barefoot as she escaped.
“As I was running, my child’s asthma medication fell, and I had to go back to retrieve it despite the intense heat. My second child suffered severe burns, with flesh visible on his arm.
“At that moment, I felt like I was going to die, but my child told me to recite prayers. Those words gave me the strength to keep going,” she said. — Bernama
KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian rescuers have recovered two more bodies from the rubble of a collapsed Buddhist temple, as frantic efforts continue in the search for survivors, more than five days after a powerful earthquake struck Myanmar.
The earthquake rattled Myanmar on March 28.
Myanmar's military government reports that the disaster has claimed the lives of over 2,700 people, with more than 4,500 others injured.
Members of the Special Malaysia Disaster Assistance and Rescue Team (Smart) deployed to Myanmar's Sagaing region recovered another two bodies – a father and son – yesterday, who had been crushed by concrete slabs.
"A father was tightly holding his child, but the weight of the building's walls and floor proved too much to bear," the team said in a Facebook post.
Rescuers took four hours to bore through cement to retrieve the bodies.
After using nearly all of their special rescue equipment, the body of a 39-year-old father was successfully recovered, along with his 8-year-old child, and handed over to family members.
The 50-member Smart team, which arrived in Myanmar on March 30, has so far pulled out six bodies in total.
Myanmar is currently reeling from the aftermath of a massive earthquake. The 7.7-magnitude tremor was felt across neighbouring regions, including Thailand and southwest China.
