Death toll in Ireland gas station explosion rises to 10

The death toll from a gas station explosion in a small village in north-west Ireland rose to 10 on Saturday and emergency workers dealing with the rubble said they did not expect to find any more bodies.

Irish police said no one was missing since Friday’s explosion in Crislow, County Donegal. Police are investigating the cause of the explosion, and Superintendent David Kelly said the evidence “points to a tragic accident.”

Ireland’s police force, En Garda Siochana, said four men, three women, two teenagers and a girl of primary school age were killed in the afternoon’s explosion. Eight people were hospitalized – one is in critical condition – after the explosion destroyed an Applegreen service station in a community of about 400 people near Ireland’s rugged Atlantic coast.

Emergency responders in Ireland and neighboring Northern Ireland joined what police said on Saturday in a “search and recovery” campaign. Sniffer dogs combed through the rubble, and a mechanical excavator removed the rubble pile from the site on Saturday.

The explosion leveled the gas station building, which houses the main shop and post office for the village, damaged an adjacent apartment building and shattered windows in nearby cottages.

“The blocks were thrown a hundred yards from the scene,” local doctor Dr. Paul Stewart told Irish broadcaster RTE. “The whole front of the building collapsed… and the roof of the first floor collapsed in the shop. It’s a miracle he got someone out.”

Irish Prime Minister Michael Martin said it was “one of the darkest days for Donegal and the country as a whole.”

“The people of this island will be as numb at this tragic loss of life as the people of Creslow with a sense of shock and utter devastation,” Martin said.

Agriculture Minister Charlie McConaughey, representing Donegal in the Parliament of Ireland, said the service station was famous across the country because of its prominent position on the area’s main N56 road, and was the “heart” of the local community.

“People are shocked and shocked,” he told Irish broadcaster RTE. “People are rallying together and everyone’s concern is with the families of those who have lost loved ones and how they can support them.”

Another local legislator, Pierce Doherty, said members of the community were in shock.

“(It) is something that no one ever thought could happen in such a small village where everyone knows each other,” he said. “Yesterday at 3.30 pm, children were coming out of school, people were going to collect their welfare payments. For such a nightmare to occur, it will take some time to sink in. ,

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