Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08TIRANA200
2008-03-17 19:15:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Tirana
Cable title:  

ALBANIA: FATAL EXPLOSION IN MUNITIONS DEPOT

Tags:  MASS EAID NATO SENV AL 
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VZCZCXRO7230
OO RUEHIK RUEHPOD RUEHYG
DE RUEHTI #0200/01 0771915
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O 171915Z MAR 08
FM AMEMBASSY TIRANA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 6826
INFO RHMFISS/CDR USEUCOM VAIHINGEN GE PRIORITY
RUEHZG/NATO EU COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUEHGV/USMISSION GENEVA PRIORITY 0921
RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUFNPKB/COMUSNAVEUR POLAD NAPLES IT PRIORITY
RUFNPKB/COMUSNAVEUR NAPLES IT PRIORITY
RUDKSR/EUCOM PLANS AND ANALYSES STUTTGART GE PRIORITY
RUEAWJA/DEPT OF JUSTICE WASHDC PRIORITY
RHMCSUU/FBI WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 TIRANA 000200 

SIPDIS

AIDAC, SIPDIS
SENSITIVE

DEPT FOR EUR/SCE and USAID
DEPT OF JUSTICE FOR OPDAT, ICITAP
USAID FOR DCHA/OFDA, AID/W for OFDA Rob Andrew & Anne Convery
GENEVA PLEASE PASS TO USAID AND RMA
BUDAPEST PLEASE PASS TO USAID/RFMC

E.O. 12958:N/A
TAGS: MASS EAID NATO SENV AL
SUBJECT: ALBANIA: FATAL EXPLOSION IN MUNITIONS DEPOT

REF: 07 TIRANA 1064

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 TIRANA 000200

SIPDIS

AIDAC, SIPDIS
SENSITIVE

DEPT FOR EUR/SCE and USAID
DEPT OF JUSTICE FOR OPDAT, ICITAP
USAID FOR DCHA/OFDA, AID/W for OFDA Rob Andrew & Anne Convery
GENEVA PLEASE PASS TO USAID AND RMA
BUDAPEST PLEASE PASS TO USAID/RFMC

E.O. 12958:N/A
TAGS: MASS EAID NATO SENV AL
SUBJECT: ALBANIA: FATAL EXPLOSION IN MUNITIONS DEPOT

REF: 07 TIRANA 1064


1. (U) At approximately 11:45 AM (local) March 15, an ammunition
storage facility near the town of Gerdec (N41 deg 24 min 40 sec, E19
deg 37 min 52 sec),between Tirana and Durres, caught fire. Shortly
after 12:00, a violent explosion destroyed homes in the immediate
vicinity of the depot and caused damage to the airport terminal 4.6
miles to the east and some window damage as far away as Tirana 11
miles southeast. The blast was heard in Skopje, Macedonia, over 100
miles to the east. A second explosion a few minutes later was
followed by multiple small explosions over the next several hours.
The cause of the incident remains unknown, but the Prosecutor
General's office has opened an investigation.


2. (U) The facility, one of over 44 sites used to store and/or
dismantle ammunition in Albania, was used by the MOD to store a
large quantity of 100 mm tank and 120 mm artillery rounds, according
to a local EOD specialist. This ammunition, like most of Albania's
100,000 tons of surplus munitions, is over 40 years old and
considered extremely unstable and dangerous. The blasts scattered
rounds in a two mile radius, and many of them are still live.


3. (U) Media reports to date indicate that soma three hundred people
were injured, fibTaej sere ki,l%d, and thirty are missing. ThEQ
Number kf $e!p(s sill probably increase since phaba ser% 2a0krpsQQ
th`t people were working in tha `Ac)hQp9 /n a i5jhp)ons dismantling
project. Ma.y i.ju2a$s s%rd -i.kr, caused by flying glass a.`Q
`%bba2 q b`ba6a8 `c a major highway two mile# Qq q. Q$reral
people with more serious injuriEs were flown to Italy and Greece for
emergency c!re. Others remain in Tirana's Military Hospital.


4. (U) PM Berisha told the media that an Americancompany, Southern
Ammunition Company, Inc. (SACIQ based in South Carolina, had
recently renewed acontract with the MOD to dismantle ammunition and
sell the scrap. (Note: Initial media reports mistakenly called the
company "SAIC," an American company previously working on a
USG-funded project that successfully and safely completed the
destruction of 2,700 metric tons of large naval weapons in December.
See Reftel.)


5. (SBU) SACI is a private company without any ties to the USG. In
fact, Post sought out the company when we heard they were working on
demilitarization, but SACI avoided contact. SACI president Patrick
Henry III contacted ODC Chief following the explosion, when
allegations that a U.S. company may have been responsible surfaced.
Henry asserted that SACI was not involved in ammunition dismantling
at the time and no SACI employees or subcontractors were present in
the facility.


6. (U) Within three hours of the first explosion, Embassy worked
through WAE American physician Dr. Charles Linderman, who assisted
at the military hospital, to provide needed medical supplies to the
hospital's trauma center, paid for by USAID. Several retired US
Army Special Forces personnel in Albania to help train the Albanian
Armed Forces volunteered to help secure the area and set up the
on-site operations center. American crisis management experts with
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the U.S. Navy, in town for
crisis management training, are consulting closely with the Ministry
of Interior Crisis Management Center. At the request of the GOA,
NAVEUR sent a team of EOD experts to assess the needs and
possibilities for military to military EOD assistance; the team
arrived March 17. The FBI offered a crime scene investigation and a
victim identification team; both were accepted by the Prosecutor's
Office. FBI is coordinating arrival. We are consulting with the
GOA to determine what additional assistance may be needed and will
seek to provide it as requested. Post expects to send a Disaster
Declaration for OFDA assistance in the next days. Embassy employees
are organizing a cash and in-kind donations collection for the
victims.

COMMENT
--------------


7. (U) Besides the tragic loss of life from this accident, the GOA
is now faced with the humanitarian needs of the survivors. The
village of Gerdec and an adjoining village were literally flattened,
making hundreds homeless. Most of the villagers were farmers who

TIRANA 00000200 002 OF 002


will not be able to use their land until it has been cleared of
unexploded ordnance by EOD teams. Television scenes from the site
some 36 hours after the explosion were eerily quiet, with dead farm
animals next to live, abandoned ones in shell-infested fields by
destroyed homes.

WITHERS