The death toll from a fiery pipeline explosion in central Mexico last month reached 125, the government announced Sunday.
Another 22 people remain in hospital, many of them with burns
covering at least 80 percent of their bodies, the social security office
IMSS reported.
On January 18, the fuel-line in Hidalgo state was deliberately
punctured, drawing hundreds of people looking to gather gasoline before
it ignited.
The disaster occurred as the government wages a huge effort to clamp
down on fuel theft, which costs Mexico an estimated three billion
dollars in 2017.
So-called “huachicol” — as the stolen fuel is known in Mexico — costs about half of market price.
Mexico is regularly rocked by deadly explosions at illegal pipeline
taps, a dangerous but lucrative business whose players include powerful
drug cartels and corrupt Pemex insiders.








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