FBI probe shows amount of chemicals in Beirut blast was a fraction of
original shipment
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[July 31, 2021] (Reuters)
- The amount of ammonium nitrate that blew
up at Beirut port last year was one fifth of the shipment unloaded there
in 2013, the FBI concluded after the blast, adding to suspicions that
much of the cargo had gone missing.
As the first anniversary approaches on Aug. 4, major questions remain
unanswered, including how a huge quantity of ammonium nitrate - which
can be used to make fertiliser or bombs - was left unsafely stored in a
capital city for years.
The blast was one of the largest non-nuclear explosions ever recorded,
killing more than 200 people, wounding thousands, and devastating
swathes of Beirut.
The FBI's Oct. 7, 2020 report, which was seen by Reuters this week,
estimates around 552 tonnes of ammonium nitrate exploded that day, much
less than the 2,754 tonnes that arrived on a Russian-leased cargo ship
in 2013.
The FBI report does not give any explanation as to how the discrepancy
arose, or where the rest of the shipment may have gone.
In response to a detailed request for comment, an FBI spokesperson
referred Reuters to the Lebanese authorities.
FBI investigators came to Beirut after the blast at Lebanon's request.
A senior Lebanese official who was aware of the FBI report and its
findings said the Lebanese authorities agreed with the Bureau on the
quantity that exploded.
Many officials in Lebanon have previously said in private they believe a
lot of the shipment was stolen.
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A view shows the site of the August 4 explosion at Beirut port,
Lebanon February 18, 2021. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir/File Photo
The ammonium nitrate was going from Georgia to
Mozambique on a Russian-leased cargo ship when the captain says he
was instructed to make an unscheduled stop in Beirut and take on
extra cargo.
The ship arrived in Beirut in November 2013 but never left, becoming
tangled in a legal dispute over unpaid port fees and ship defects.
No one ever came forward to claim the shipment.
The senior Lebanese official said there were no firm conclusions as
to why the quantity that exploded was less than the original
shipment. One theory was that part of it was stolen. A second theory
was that only part of the shipment detonated, with the rest blown
out to sea, the official said.
The FBI report said "an approximate amount reaching around 552
metric tonnes of ammonium nitrate exploded in warehouse 12".
It noted the warehouse was large enough to house the 2,754 tonne
shipment, which was stored in one-tonne bags, but added "it is not
logical that all of them were present at the time of the explosion".
(Editing by William Maclean)
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