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At least 14 dead in apparent toxic gas leak in Pakistan

Paramedic personnel shift a patient on a stretcher into a hospital in Karachi, Pakistan, on February 18, 2020, after a gas leak killed at least 14 people and sickened dozens of others in a coastal residential area. (Photo by AFP)

An apparent gas leak killed at least 14 people near the Pakistani port city of Karachi, officials said Tuesday, as investigators worked to determine the source of the deadly emission.

Residents of Keamari, a commercial and residential area, began falling sick Sunday, officials said.

A doctor at one hospital, who asked not to be named, said 250 people had been admitted for treatment, after complaining of breathing difficulties and burning eyes.

A family arrives at a hospital in Karachi, Pakistan, on February 18, 2020, after a gas leak killed 14 people and sickened dozens of others in a coastal residential area. (Photo by AFP)

Local health ministry spokesman Zafar Mehdi told AFP that 14 people had died at various hospitals.

At the state-run Jinnah Post-graduate Medical Center, about 35 people arrived for emergency treatment.

"Most of the patients were suffering from choking and breathlessness," Seemin Jamali, who heads the emergency department, told AFP.

Women hold a victim (C) in a rickshaw as they arrive at a hospital in Karachi, Pakistan, on February 18, 2020, after a gas leak killed at least 14 people and sickened dozens of others in a coastal residential area. (Photo by AFP)

Authorities initially suspected some sort of gas could have leaked from the port, but the Karachi Port Trust denied that was the case.

"All the casualties took place outside the port, and our facility is clean," a port spokesman said.

Authorities have sought help from the navy's chemical and biological department, according to Nasir Shah, the provincial information minister.

(Source: AFP)


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