The Salang Tunnel Fire
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Salang Tunnel fire
A distance view of the Salang Tunnel in March 2010
The
Salang Tunnel fire occurred on 3 November 1982 in Afghanistan's
Salang Tunnel during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. Details are uncertain and officially the number of casualties was recorded as between 168176 Soviet and Afghan soldiers and civilians. Despite this, contemporary Western media claimed the incident may have been the deadliest known road accident, and one of the deadliest fires of modern times, with the death toll estimated at 2,700 to 3,000 people.[1]
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Fire
Very few facts are known about the fire. All information available constitutes little more than hearsay, in part because the Soviet Army was not inclined to reveal massive losses during wartime. Neither the Soviet nor Afghan governments confirmed any incident occurred. Most sources agree that it involved a Soviet Army convoy traveling southward through the tunnel.
According to Soviet Army records, on 3 November 1982, two military convoys (2211 and 2212) collided in the Salang tunnel causing a traffic jam. There were no fires or explosions.
Victims
Initial reports described fuel and ordnance explosions, and estimates of the death toll were as high as 2,700.[5] Shortly after the event, Western diplomats indicated that a collision with a fuel truck initiated the fire in the tunnel that led to the catastrophe resulting in the death of as many as 700 Soviet soldiers and 400 to 2,000 Afghan civilians.[6] People died either from fire or of asphyxiation.[6] The death toll was subsequently revised downwards many times.
56 to 64 Soviet soldiers and 112 Afghan people were killed by carbon monoxide emitted by idling engines. US military analysts placed the casualty figure at 100 to 200 Soviet and Afghan soldiers.[6] Some burned to death; others were killed by smoke and by carbon monoxide escaping from vehicles whose drivers kept their engines idling to stay warm in the freezing cold. As many as 700 Soviet troops and 2,000 Afghan soldiers and civilians may have died.
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[1]
"Truck explosion kills 3,000 in Afghanistan". History Channel. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
[5]
https://web.archive.org/web/20101015042449/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,955035,00.html | AFGHANISTAN: Tunnel Tragedy - TIME
[6]
"Afghan Blast Toll is Put in Hundreds". New York Times. Associated Press. November 10, 1982. Retrieved February 8, 2017.
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