Japanese police were yesterday investigating the cause of a powerful blast that ripped through a restaurant in Hokkaido overnight, injuring 42 people and damaging surrounding buildings.
The explosion in Sapporo on Sunday night started fires and caused the partial collapse of some neighboring buildings, forcing dozens of residents into shelters, officials said.
The cause of the blast was still under investigation, police said, amid reports that it might have been a gas leak.
Photo: Kyodo/via REUTERS
Some reports said that fumes were leaking from spray cans that had been collected for disposal at a real estate company in the building.
However, investigators were also looking into at least nine propane tanks installed in the building for the various businesses located inside.
Numerous customers at the restaurant on the building’s first floor said that they smelled gas at the time of the explosion, Kyodo news agency reported.
The blast produced large flames and sent plumes of smoke rising in the night air, with witnesses describing a terrifying boom.
The two-story wooden building, which also housed a clinic, was seriously damaged, a Sapporo City Fire Department official said.
Police said that 42 people had been injured, but there were no fatalities.
Among the injured were several children, as well as a man who suffered burns and a woman who jumped from the building to escape, breaking her leg in the process, they said.
“There was an enormous sound, ‘bang,’ then when I looked up at the sky it was filled with plumes of smoke,” an elderly woman told Japan Broadcasting Corp (NHK).
“The ceiling fell, then the entire second floor collapsed and we were all stuck. We managed to escape after everyone kicked through the wall,” a person who was in the restaurant at the time told Kyodo.
The fire from the blast spread to neighboring buildings, and debris blasted out by the explosion shattered the windows of nearby apartments and restaurants, local reports said.
“We are investigating details about the damage together with police at the scene,” the city fire department official said.
The blast happened at about 8:30pm and the city government opened a shelter to house dozens of people whose homes were damaged, the official said.
The explosion also caused a temporary blackout, with 250 buildings losing electricity, but power was later restored, he said.
The three tenants in the building were poorly prepared for possible fires, fire department official Takashi Shida said.
“We instructed them to improve these points during an on-site inspection in October, but they had not made progress,” he said.
Many small and medium-sized older buildings in Japan are built partly or entirely from wood and are vulnerable to fires.
In February, 11 people were killed in Sapporo after a fire broke out at a home for elderly people with financial difficulties.
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