Devastating Blast Leaves Mark on Turkmen Town

Devastating Blast Leaves Mark on Turkmen Town

This apartment block is located over six kilometres from the arms dump, yet its upper floors were gutted by fire. (Photo: IWPR)
This apartment block is located over six kilometres from the arms dump, yet its upper floors were gutted by fire. (Photo: IWPR)
Clearing up around a kindergarten hit by the blast. (Photo: IWPR)
Clearing up around a kindergarten hit by the blast. (Photo: IWPR)
A local sports stadium was used as a makeshift mortuary after the explosion. (Photo: IWPR)
A local sports stadium was used as a makeshift mortuary after the explosion. (Photo: IWPR)

Two months after an ammunition dump went up in flames in the town of Abadan in central Turkmenistan, residents are still coming to terms with the devastation. 

The 50,000 residents of Abadan, some 20 kilometres from the Turkmen capital Ashgabat, were evacuated as a series of explosions at a military depot rocked the town on July 7.

The authorities said 15 people died, including two members of the military, but Khronika Turkmenistana, a human rights reporting site run by émigrés, said it had information about 1,382 deaths, a third of them of children.

The exploding munitions destroyed surrounding homes and offices. In the village of Gunesh, close by the arms dump, 127 houses were flattened.

Government investigators dispatched to Abadan said the fire was caused by extremely hot weather.

For more on the accident, and how local residents used the internet to get the story out to the world, see Web Users Evade Controls To Report Turkmen Blast.

People eventually began returning to their homes, and the government promised to rebuild Abadan. President Gurbanguly Berdymuhammedov announced an urban development programme for the town, lasting until 2030.

Even now, though, the town looks empty, and residents say it will take a long time to forget what happened there.

This article was produced as part of IWPR's News Briefing Central Asia output, funded by the National Endowment for Democracy.

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