2006 Abule Egba pipeline explosion

[2] The cause of the explosion remains unknown, while witnesses have stated that the broken pipeline was tapped when the blast occurred.

Abiodun Orebiyi, the secretary-general of the Nigerian Red Cross (NRC), estimated that there were at least 200 dead but indicated that there was no official death toll and was unable to determine the final number of deaths, stating that the NRC "[doesn't] know if it is 300, 400 or 500".

[2][3] He also added that 60 people had been taken to the hospital with serious burns,[3] while a number of houses had been destroyed, along with a mosque and a church.

[4] Another senior official, Ige Oladimeji, was quoted as saying that there has been 260 documented to be dead by nightfall.

[5] On the day of the explosion, a Reuters news agency photographer estimated 500 bodies in the scene.

A map indicating (circled in red) the location of Lagos, Nigeria.