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Mexico Pipeline Explosion: Oil Pipeline Blast In San Martin Texmelucan Kills At Least 28

First Posted: 12-20-10 02:42 AM   |   Updated: 12-20-10 10:55 PM

SAN MARTIN TEXMELUCAN, Mexico (Associated Press) — A massive oil pipeline explosion lay waste to parts of a central Mexican city Sunday, incinerating people, cars, houses and trees as gushing crude turned streets into flaming rivers. At least 28 people were killed, 13 of them children, in a disaster authorities blamed on oil thieves.

The blast in San Martin Texmelucan, initally estimated to have affected 5,000 residents in a three-mile (five-kilometer) radius, scorched homes and cars and left metal and pavement twisted and in some cases burned to ash in the intense heat.

Relatives sobbed as firefighters pulled charred bodies from the incinerated homes, some of the remains barely more than piles of ashes and bones.

Officials identified all but four of the dead by Sunday night. Although they released some names, they didn't say if they were all residents of the area or possible suspects.

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A firefighter throws a bucket of water on a burning truck in San Martin Texmelucan, Mexico, Sunday, Dec. 19, 2010. A pipeline operated by Mexico's state-owned oil company Petroleos Mexicanos, or PEMEX, exploded when thieves were attempting to steal either gas or oil, killing at least 27 people, authorities said.(AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)
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Housewife Zoyla Perez Cortes, 27, said she awoke about 5:30 a.m. to a strange, overpowering smell, like gasoline. Minutes later, her street looked like it was flowing in tar and then erupted in flames. Her husband knocked down a wall allowing them to escape out the back of their two-story, cement-brick home with their three children.

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Her brother-in-law is being treated for burns in a hospital, but she didn't know the fate of his wife and two children.

"It was like we were living in an inferno," she said, her eyes red from crying. "Everything was covered in smoke."

Laura Gurza, chief of the federal Civil Protection emergency response agency, said that in addition to the 28 deaths, at least 52 people were hurt and 84 remained in a shelter late Sunday after fleeing San Martin,about 55 miles (90 kilometers) east of Mexico City. More than 115 homes were scorched, 32 of them destroyed.

The explosion was apparently caused by thieves trying to steal crude oil, said Valentin Meneses, interior secretary for the state of Puebla, where San Martin is located. Investigators found a hole in the pipeline and equipment for extracting crude, Gurza said.

"They lost control because of the high pressure with which the fuel exits the pipeline," he said.

The oil flowed more than half a mile (one kilometer) down a city street before diverting into a river. At some point a spark of unknown origin caused both to erupt in flames.

Several bodies were found in cars near the location of the leak, but authorities didn't know if the dead were involved in the theft or just there by coincidence.

Many of the buildings destroyed were humble cement homes. Gurza said people are not permitted to live near oil pipelines, but Jose Luis Chavez, 58, who lives 10 blocks from the explosion, said residents had been there for some time.

Chavez said he heard at least two loud booms and saw flames leap more than 30 feet (10 meters) in the air. It was as if a bomb had exploded underground, he added.

President Felipe Calderon arrived late Sunday afternoon to talk with displaced people in a shelter, visit the injured in a hospital and survey damage on the main street where the fuel exploded. Earlier, he expressed condolences to the families of the dead and his support for those injured and affected. He said the federal government would give its full support in investigating who was responsible and bringing them to justice.

No one had been detained.

Interior Minister Francisco Blake Mora mobilized several federal ministries to help victims with medical care, shelter and recovering their lost homes and property.

The state-owned oil company Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex, said in a statement that it had shut down the pipeline. Government authorities said the fire was under control by midday. Some areas were without electricity or water.

San Martin Texmelucan is a city of about 130,000 people, according to 2005 government figures, in view of Central Mexico's spectacular volcanos, Popocatepetl and Iztaccihuatl. Farming is important to the area's economy, along with a manufacturing sector that makes chemical and petrochemical products, pharmaceuticals, textiles and metals, the city's website says.

Pemex has struggled with chronic theft, losing as much as 10 percent of all of its product. Criminals tap remote pipelines, sometimes building pipelines of their own, to siphon off hundreds of millions of dollars worth of oil each year, Pemex has said.

There have been 100 such illegal taps this year all along the pipeline that exploded Sunday. It runs from Veracruz, a heavy oil producing Gulf coast state, to Mexico state outside the capital, said Juan Jose Suarez, Pemex director general.

Suarez also reported 60 illegal taps on the pipeline in the area of Sunday's disaster, and 580 nationwide this year. He said such illegal taps cause leaks in only 3 to 4 percent of the cases.

In 2009, the U.S. Justice Department said U.S. refineries bought millions of dollars worth of oil stolen from Mexican government pipelines and smuggled across the border in illegal operations led by Mexican drug cartels expanding their reach.

Two Texas oil company officials were sentenced to probation in September for their roles in the sale of petroleum products stolen from Mexico.

Pemex sued five companies in the U.S. in June for allegedly buying stolen Mexican petroleum products.

Also in June, police arrested 13 people who they said excavated a 500-foot (150-meter) tunnel under a busy neighborhood in Mexico City to steal fuel from oil company pipelines.

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Mexico Pipeline Explosion
A firefighter throws a bucket of water on a burning truck in San Martin Texmelucan, Mexico, Sunday, Dec. 19, 2010. A pipeline operated by Mexico's state-owned oil company Petroleos Mexicanos, or PEMEX, exploded when thieves were attempting to steal either gas or oil, killing at least 27 people, authorities said.(AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)
SAN MARTIN TEXMELUCAN, Mexico (Associated Press) &mdash; A massive oil pipeline explosion lay waste to parts of a central Mexican city Sunday, incinerating people, cars, houses and trees as gushing cr...
SAN MARTIN TEXMELUCAN, Mexico (Associated Press) &mdash; A massive oil pipeline explosion lay waste to parts of a central Mexican city Sunday, incinerating people, cars, houses and trees as gushing cr...
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MarandaLaw   20 hours ago (1:42 PM)
If someone,to­ld you all,,,How to stop,,thes­e Explosions­,,Would you all Stop them First,,or Wait for 22 People to Die??
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BBackSoon   22 hours ago (11:41 AM)
It is not every day that you see a fireman in full gear throwing a bucket of water on a fire.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jean Chilvers   17 hours ago (4:38 PM)
And that is a prime example of why Americans believe what they do. God forbid they show the real pictures. No, let's make it look as bad as possible.
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Cory111   1 hour ago (8:43 AM)
"Growing numbers of employed people live in near poverty, struggling to make ends meet"
The above is not about Mexico, it's the United States, my country.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Badfinger1   23 hours ago (10:53 AM)
....The important thing to remember is that America can sleep well knowing that our lack of insistence that N.A.F.T.A. include fair wages,work­ing conditions and some basic human rights for Mexico to be included has had the effect of the U.S. lowering it's standards rather than raising Mexico's..­....N.A.F.­T.A....C.A­.F.T.A...A­nd all the Asian as well as Indian trade pacts basically use the same principles so in the long run...WE will become more like them rather than them become more like us...Not only have we not shared the American dream(Hope­) with our trading partners..­.WE have been shipping(W­ith tax incentives­) OUR jobs and the American Dreams that come with them over to them,witho­ut the whole dream thing.....­.GOD BLESS AMERICA!!!­!!
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sve   23 hours ago (10:45 AM)
I love that country, wonderful people, climate, food, country. But there is a well-entre­nched tolerance of corruption that drags them down. Anything of consequenc­e requires bribes. To establish a rule of law at this point would need overwhelmi­ng military response. Anything less is not strong enough, even if the populace desires it.
patman77   24 hours ago (10:12 AM)
I just drove from n. georgia to la cruz, by puerta villarta. No problems. no dangerous situations­. all the people I had contact with were friendly and genuine. obviously the mexicans and mex gov. is not buying the stolen oil. it the greedy middlemen selling to highest bidder as originated by texas rednecks many years ago. as far as the violence/d­rugs the nra has made it possible to send as many weapons there as gun runners choose. if this was not a fact we would not be having this conversati­on about either they would still be running around with switchblad­es and the federalies would still be the main problem we griped about.
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OutAtFirst   24 hours ago (10:10 AM)
One thing's for sure, they could use an upgrade to their firefighti­ng equipment. A 5-gallon bucket?
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Cory111   1 hour ago (8:51 AM)
Have you given any thought to the fact the fire truck was busy on a fire across the street? Nah that would taken the fire out of your post. Have you considered the truck might have had a full tank of gas which could have exploded at any minute yet he was trying to possibly save lives, firefighte­rs do that you know?
It might be a good idea for you to have a look at some 9/11 pictures and see what our firefighte­rs were using to give you a better idea, they used anything that was available at the time.
Merry Christmas.
Cory
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
artist-53   08:58 AM on 12/20/2010
This provides a bit more on the companies listed in the article.
http://www­.themonito­r.com/arti­cles/texas­-39622-oil­-pemex.htm­l
Pittsburgh58   05:37 AM on 12/20/2010
One more event for the prequel to Mad Max and Children of Men.
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monicaangela   06:11 AM on 12/20/2010
You wrote exactly what I was thinking, Mexico is the canary in the cold mine of the Americas.  0;-)
NeverUndecided   05:07 AM on 12/20/2010
Mexico is in very, very bad shape and there's no political will anywhere to tap for the amount of assistance that would be required to "fix" it even nominally, it sure would be useful to do the one thing that could be on most benefit, i.e., legalize drugs in the US. Your basice winner all around type deal.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jean Chilvers   07:01 AM on 12/20/2010
Mexico is not in bad shape. We have much political good will with the US and with Latin and South America. Our cost of living is lower than yours, we have lower unemployme­nt that you do and our inflation is lower than yours.

Legalizing drugs, although I am for that, will not solve this problem. This is a perfect example of what cartels would do if drug money is cut off.

Please learn about Mexico yourself with research and not through the perception­s of the American press...bi­ased at best.
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Cory111   08:03 AM on 12/20/2010
As an American citizen that has lived in Mexico for over eleven years and is well integrated into the community few out here truly know Mexico other then what they read in the news. We have problems down here like any other country but drugs make the headlines.
We don’t hear much about all of the arms being sold up there then coming across our border. We hear about Cartels and their carnage but there is very little news about why the Cartels are doing so well. Could it be they have such a good market up in the states? We see the “War on Drugs” and wonder why the money spent on it isn’t better used to help those up there that are addicted. It’s classic, “Supply and Demand.”
Speaking as an American citizen we should question why our country is so addicted to various drugs. More people abuse prescripti­on drugs then illegal ones.
With regards to illegal’s entering the states, is it really a surprise? These are people that for the most part have never gone to school and see the States as a place to compensate for their lack of education. They know that up there their hands can make money plus there are a few other free things that get their attention. I see invisible signs all along the border saying, “Come on up we have jobs waiting for you.”
Seasons Greeting.
Cory
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Richard Sevrance   08:38 AM on 12/20/2010
Exactly !
MG2010   09:55 AM on 12/20/2010
With all due respect...­..you must be kidding.
Mexico has been in a bad shape since at least the mid 70's when politician­s finally bankrupted the country after another 50 years of blatant ransacking­. Corruption exists at all levels (police, building inspectors­, environmen­t regulation­s, even market stalls...)
Cost of living is only lower than the US among the poor. Go to any fancy part of Mexico City and anything you buy or anything you eat will cost you the same (sometimes more) than in the US. Tacos are still cheaper though....­but real estate will cost you.
Go to any place in the Riviera Maya, or any other tourist resort...s­ame thing. Restaurant­s are notoriousl­y more expensive than any city in the US.
Lower unemployme­nt than the US? That is the biggest fallacy out there. 60% of the population in Mexico is of indigenous origin and grossly "underempl­oyed", the new buzzword. If a measure of employment is selling trinkets on the street or driving a cab 20 hours a day, yeah. For the last 50 years people with absolutely nothing in the countrysid­e have been migrating to the City making it a huge agglomerat­ion of "underempl­oyed"...
The political will you talk about is there only as a gesture to prevent Mexico from another revolution­.
Reality check please!!!
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futbol4fun   21 hours ago (12:38 PM)
Yes. Living in a hut with no water or electricit­y does lower the monthly bills a bit. Plus with most of your able bodied people up here looking for jobs, it is no surprise that you have low unemployme­nt.
michaeljm72   04:39 AM on 12/20/2010
oh my god poor mexico
ishbyishkar   03:44 AM on 12/20/2010
This is a SAD and complicate­d situation for many reasons. The loss of life is devastatin­g. The fact that innocent children and bystanders were killed and injured is heartbreak­ing. That this is another crime of the drug cartels that is initiated in Mexico and then concluded with a sale of stolen oil to the USA is shocking.
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Cory111   08:05 AM on 12/20/2010
It was individual­s, not the Cartel. Stealing oil and gas is peanuts as compared to selling drugs.
ishbyishkar   6 hours ago (3:59 AM)
When I was in Mexico in April, I was told by people living in Mexico that it was the Cartels that were perpetuati­ng these oil thefts and sales to the USA and I was shocked. I believe that if you read the article above carefully it states that the "cartels had expanded their reach" in 2009 by stealing and selling oil from Pemex to the USA. My understand­ing is that it is still going on. My understand­ing is that they have huge pipelines to tankers that get shipped up to the US...They can afford to buy tankers at this point...ha­ha we are not talking peanuts now.
CaBrit   03:26 AM on 12/20/2010
And the goverment want's open borders with these people....­?
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Cory111   08:06 AM on 12/20/2010
What PEOPLE are you talking about?
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Arturo Ramrez   16 hours ago (5:57 PM)
He means burnt mexicans, of course... but he has no issues with British Petroleum operating legally in the U.S...
sillyfrog   23 hours ago (10:38 AM)
Goverment is a Bush word. These people? Our businesses pay poor 'these people' to steal oil.
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TStringfellow   18 hours ago (4:05 PM)
The Mexican people should be closing their borders to the U.S.

It's the US that sends the guns, the U.S. that buys the drugs that fuel the conflict. The people of Mexico would greatly benefit from keeping the gringos out.