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| TOXIC
CLOUD Sulphuric smoke affected about 25 villages. |
Firefighters and
U.S. Army engineers were close to declaring victory July 8
over a stubborn fire at a sulfur plant near Mosul, Iraq, that
has burned since June 25, spewing toxic fumes that killed
two residents of nearby villages and forced the evacuation
of the surrounding area.
At the height of the effort at
the Misraq State Sulfur Plant, 20 miles south of Mosul, soldiers
and engineers from the 101st Airborne Division's
1st Brigade Combat Team and the 326 Engineer Battalion,
home based in Ft. Campbell, Ky., and the 938th Fire Fighting
Detachment, an Army National Guard unit based in Driggs, Id.,
were working around the clock alongside 57 Iraqi firefighters
and 50 civilian volunteers. They needed 22 bulldozers, 16
dump trucks, five loaders and six scrapers to contain and
smother the fire under dirt and foam.
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| EQUIPMENT
BUILDUP 22 bulldozers were used to berm the blaze. |
The Iraqi firefighters doused flames
and cooled the ground so the engineers could drive dump trucks
and bulldozers close to the fire, pushing berms in from the
north and south to complete an enclosure. They expected to
use a total of 13,000 gallons of foam to extinguish the blaze.
According to division medical personnel,
the sulfuric smoke showed a concentration of 52 particles
of sulfur per million in the area surrounding the fire shortly
after it began. A reading of 30 ppm or greater is considered
dangerous, especially to the elderly, asthmatic and young
children. An elderly woman and a small child have died from
smoke related complications. About 25 villages and the cities
of Qayyarah, Al Shurah and Makhmur have been affected by the
fumes.
The cause is under invistigation.
(Photos courtesy of U.S. Army 101st
Airborne Division)
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