Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

World Mena

Egypt moves 'dangerous materials' from airports after Beirut blast

Statement referred to materials held in "cargo bays and storage warehouses"



Technicians preparing the Solar Impulse 2, the solar powered plane, at Cairo's International Airport in Egypt before it takes off and heads to Abu Dhabi on the final leg of its world tour with Swiss Bertrand Piccard behind the controls.
Image Credit: AFP

Cairo: Egypt's civil aviation ministry said that after Lebanon's massive explosion last week it was moving "dangerous materials" held at airports nationwide to more secure locations.

The ministry is "taking precautionary measures with regards to dangerous materials, either immediately releasing them or transferring them to safe storage spaces well outside the range of airports and residential areas," it said in a statement Sunday.

See more

The statement referred to materials held in "cargo bays and storage warehouses in Cairo's airport and all airports nationwide", without specifying which kind of materials would be moved.

The announcement came after an unsecured stock of ammonium nitrate stored in a warehouse in Beirut's port exploded last Tuesday, killing at least 158 people and wounding 6,000 others.

Advertisement

"A committee will conduct a comprehensive evaluation of all procedures applied inside the storage areas... in order to address any risks before they arise," Egypt's civil aviation minister, Mohamed Manar, was quoted as saying.

The Beirut blast left a 43-metre deep crater at the port and wreaked destruction across swathes of the capital.

Advertisement