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Gas explosion destroys Baltimore homes, one dead and children trapped


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Gas explosion destroys Baltimore homes, one dead and children trapped

By Daniel Trotta

 

2020-08-10T174928Z_1_LYNXNPEG791GN_RTROPTP_4_USA-BALTIMORE-BLAST.JPG

Rescue workers stand on the debris of a destroyed building after an explosion in a residential area of Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. August 10, 2020. REUTERS/Rosem Morton

 

(Reuters) - A gas explosion ripped through a Baltimore neighborhood on Monday, killing at least one person, injuring four and trapping children as the blast destroyed at least three homes, firefighters said.

 

Fire officials described it as a natural gas explosion but said the exact cause was under investigation.

 

The blast destroyed three brick row homes and ripped open the wall of another, spreading debris throughout the neighborhood. Rescuers picked through the rubble, searching for victims with their hands and hand tools, Baltimore City Fire Department spokeswoman Blair Adams told reporters at the scene.

 

A gas explosion ripped through a Baltimore neighborhood on Monday, killing at least one person, injuring four and trapping children as the blast destroyed at least three homes. Lisa Bernhard produced this report.

 

One woman was killed, four people were hospitalized in serious condition, and firefighters were trying to rescue a sixth person, fire officials said.

 

At one point at least five people were trapped, some of them children, the Baltimore Firefighters IAFF Local 734 said on Twitter.

 

Neighbors responding to the blast dug through rubble and called out for victims.

 

One neighbor told the Baltimore Sun he could hear shouts from trapped children.

 

"Come get us! We're stuck!" came the cries, Kevin Matthews told the Sun.

 

Matthews found one person buried from the neck down and another sheltering in a closet, the Sun said.

 

"You knew it was something catastrophic," Dean Jones told WBFF television about hearing the blast. "I didn't think. I didn't grab shoes. I took off running. I followed the smoke. I started yelling to come help."

 

Jones and several other neighbors freed at least one woman from the scene.

 

"Once they said a kid was in there, I lost it. I said I had to get in there now," Jones told WBAL television.

 

But he also wanted no special accolades, saying, "I am not a hero, I'm a human."

 

Neighbors said their windows were blown out and doors blasted off the hinges, the Sun reported.

 

(Reporting by Daniel Trotta and Brendan O'Brien; editing by Jonathan Oatis)

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2020-08-11
 
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