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Dhaka: An underground gas pipeline near a mosque exploded during evening prayers outside Bangladesh's capital, leaving 21 worshipers dead and dozens injured with critical burns, officials said Saturday.
The blast occurred Friday night as people were finishing their prayers at Baitus Salat Jame Mosque at Narayanganj, local police chief Zayedul Alam said.
7 victims are in a critical condition, doctors said, adding that some of them including the mosque's 'Imam' suffered 992 per cent burn injuries.
By Saturday afternoon, 16 people, including a 7-year-old boy, had succumbed to their injuries. Doctors at a burn unit of a state-run hospital were treating at least 37 people with burns on up to 90% of their bodies, said Samanta Lal Sen, a coordinator of the unit.
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Firefighters were investigating the cause of the explosion.
Abdullah Al Arefin, assistant director of the Fire Service and Civil Defense, said that officials suspected that gas had accumulated inside the mosque from a leak in the underground pipeline, and that it had gone unnoticed.
"The gas could not go out as the windows of the mosque were shut because of the air conditioners,'' he said.
Fire service officials and gas workers are working on the site to repair a faulty gas line which caused the mishap.
Faulty installation of gas lines are often reported by Bangladeshi media, while unplanned road-digging work often leads to disasters in the country, which is seeking rapid industrial expansion and economic development.
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