Kolding -- Denmark
350 buildings damaged
17 injured 1 dead
2004 -- Twenty-four hours
after a huge blaze broke out at a fireworks factory, killing a firefighter, injuring 17
other people and destroying at least 20 houses, hundreds of Danish firefighters finally
contained the fire Thursday.
As many as 350 buildings - private homes and small
businesses - may have been damaged by the fire at the N.P. Johnsens fireworks factory in
Kolding in western Denmark.
Television footage showed some of the 20 homes
burned down but authorities said the powerful explosions and thick smoke had damaged many
nearby houses.
The blaze was thought to have started Wednesday when
two containers with fireworks were being loaded onto a truck, police said. It was unclear
what caused the containers to combust.
"We're still keeping a large area cordoned
off," said police spokeswoman Gitte Schou. "There are still three containers
filled with fireworks in the middle of the burning factory and there is a risk of
explosion."
"Firemen are trying to cool the containers down
but there is still a tremendous heat," she added. "It might take days before
people can return to their homes."
The fire at the factory in Kolding, 200 kilometres
west of the capital, Copenhagen, started Wednesday shortly after 2 p.m. and quickly spread
to a nearby building, leading to a chain reaction of explosions.
Although the plant has a licence to store 300 tonnes
of fireworks, police said they believed that as many as 2,000 tonnes were stockpiled.
Bendt Bendtsen, Denmark's economics and trade
minister, said "there was a suspicion that the factory had violated fireworks storage
rules."
A 33-year-old firefighter was killed and 17 people,
including firemen, rescue workers and police officers, had been treated for minor burns
and smoke inhalation, Schou said. All had been released from hospital. Overnight, some 60
people had been under medical observation after complaining about respiratory problems.
Teams of psychologists counselled people affected by
the accident.
About 2,000 people living near the factory were
evacuated to nearby schools and seniors homes as authorities set up a security perimeter
around the area.
In wake of a May 2000 explosion of a firework
storage depot in the Dutch town of Enschede that killed 22 people, several neighbours of
the plant in Kolding demanded that it be shut down.
Kolding -- Denmark
Danes stunned by fireworks blaze
-- The blaze sparked one
of the country's largest firefighting efforts The clean-up has begun after a massive blaze
at a fireworks factory in western Denmark, which left one person dead and destroyed at
least 20 homes. Some of the 2,000 residents evacuated when the fire broke out at the N.P.
Johnsens factory in Kolding have been allowed to return home.
As many as 350 buildings, including homes and
businesses, were damaged.
One firefighter was killed and dozens of emergency
workers were injured in the blaze, which started on Wednesday.
The fire set off a chain of explosions that
devastated the surrounding area.
"It looks like a moon landscape, this looks
worse than the many war zones I have seen," Defence Minister Soeren Gade said during
a visit to the site.
The blackened landscape was littered with debris,
gutted cars and damaged houses.
But several areas were reopened to residents on
Friday.
Firefighters were still extinguishing small blazes,
and police investigators and army explosives experts surveyed the area.
The cause of the fire has not been determined,
authorities said.
Police said they believed the plant was storing more
than its licensed 300 tonnes of fireworks.
The factory has denied any wrongdoing.