Videos Show Colossal Fireball After Explosion at Customs Warehouse

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Videos shared on Telegram show a colossal fireball in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, after an explosion at a warehouse near the country's biggest airport.

The Central Asian country's health ministry said in a statement on Thursday that a 15-year-old boy was killed after a window frame fell on him while 162 people were injured. The blast reportedly damaged houses 20 miles away.

Multiple videos and photos circulating on social media showed a huge column of fire and a cloud of smoke rising into the sky.

A warehouse near the airport in Tashkent
Firefighter vehicles pictured on September 28, 2023, at the site of an explosion at a warehouse near the airport in Tashkent that caused multiple injuries, authorities in Uzbekistan said. The health ministry said the fire... Getty Images/TEMUR ISMAILOV/AFP

The cause of the explosion is unclear. Russia's state-run news agency Tass cited the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Uzbekistan as saying that a blaze broke out at a warehouse owned by Inter Logistics LLC in Tashkent's Sergeli district after it was struck by "lightning."

However, local news outlet Nova24 reported that the blast damaged nearby houses, shattering windows and damaging doors. The publication said it believes Russian media mistranslated government statements that the cause of the blast was a lightning strike.

"In fact, we are talking about an explosion," Nova24 reported.

Uzbekistan authorities have previously used the term translated by Russian media as "lightning" to describe an explosion.

The warehouse stores components for electric vehicles, according to the Russian Telegram channel Sirena, which also raised doubts about the cause of the explosion being a lightning strike.

"According to the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Uzbekistan, the cause of the explosion was a lightning strike on a warehouse [which stores] electric cars and batteries for them. At the same time, lightning is not visible in a video [which shows] the moment of the explosion. Also, eyewitnesses did not report this on social networks," the Telegram channel reported.

Newsweek has contacted the Press Secretary of the Minister of Internal Affairs via email to request clarification on the matter.

Uzbekistan's Emergencies Ministry said a "special laboratory" had been set up at the scene of the explosion to investigate the blast.

A video published by the Kremlin-linked Russian Telegram news channel Mash showed the moment windows were blown out of their frames in residential homes.

"The preliminary cause of the explosion in Tashkent could have been batteries for electric vehicles...the explosion was so powerful that almost nothing was left of the warehouse itself," Mash reported.

According to local publication Sputnik-Uzbekistan, some 30 people were hospitalized after the blast.

The Tashkent International Airport is operating as usual, officials were cited by Russia's Interfax outlet as saying.

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About the writer

Isabel van Brugen is a Newsweek Reporter based in Kuala Lumpur. Her focus is reporting on the Russia-Ukraine war. Isabel joined Newsweek in 2021 and had previously worked with news outlets including the Daily Express, The Times, Harper's BAZAAR, and Grazia. She has an M.A. in Newspaper Journalism at City, University of London, and a B.A. in Russian language at Queen Mary, University of London. Languages: English, Russian


You can get in touch with Isabel by emailing i.vanbrugen@newsweek.com or by following her on X @isabelvanbrugen


Isabel van Brugen is a Newsweek Reporter based in Kuala Lumpur. Her focus is reporting on the Russia-Ukraine war. Isabel ... Read more