Gas leak in India’s northern state of Punjab kills 11 people

An oil tankers train passes near the Guwahati Refinery operated by Indian Oil Corporation, in Guwahati on March 30, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 30 April 2023
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Gas leak in India’s northern state of Punjab kills 11 people

  • Industrial gas leaks blamed on poor safety standards and insufficient checks are common in India
  • Last year, at least 112 women were hospitalized after gas leak at apparel factory in Andhra Pradesh

AMRITSAR: A gas leak killed 11 people in India, an official said Sunday, in the latest deadly industrial accident in the vast developing economy of 1.4 billion people.

The gas leak happened in Giaspura, an industrial area of Ludhiana in the northern state of Punjab.

The official, who asked not to be named, said they had yet to ascertain what kind of gas leaked or the source of the leak.

“Eleven dead and four in hospital. Rescue operation is on,” the official told AFP after the incident.

Industrial gas leaks blamed on poor safety standards and insufficient checks are common in India.

Last August, at least 112 women were hospitalized after a gas leak at an apparel manufacturing plant in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh.

That followed a similar accident in June when around 200 women fell unconscious after a gas leak in the same area, broadcaster NDTV reported.

In 2020, at least 15 people were killed, and hundreds were hospitalized after a gas leak at a chemical plant in Visakhapatnam, an industrial port city in the same state.

Nearly 1,000 people were exposed to the gas and over 500 were hospitalized with symptoms of severe respiratory distress and skin and eye irritation.

Residents were found slumped in the streets after being exposed to the gas, forcing a large-scale evacuation around the plant.

That pre-dawn accident took place at a chemical plant owned by LG Polymers, a subsidiary of South Korea’s LG Chem.

Two senior South Korean executives and 10 other local employees of LG Polymers were later arrested and charged with offenses, including the Indian legal equivalent of manslaughter.

A 4,000-page government report accused the firm of negligence and said the disaster was due to a lack of safety protocols and poor emergency response.

The styrene gas leaked from tanks at the polystyrene manufacturing unit that had been lying idle for weeks due to the nationwide coronavirus lockdown.

That incident sparked memories of when India witnessed one of its worst industrial disasters in 1984.

Gas leaked from a pesticide plant in Bhopal, a city in central India.

At least 3,500 people living around the plant operated by Union Carbide died in the days that followed the leak. People continue to suffer the effects to this day.

Children are still born disfigured, with webbed feet and hands, and experience stunted growth because of the gas that affected their mothers.


WHO says one person dead from Nipah virus in Bangladesh

Updated 07 February 2026
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WHO says one person dead from Nipah virus in Bangladesh

  • Nipah is an infection that spreads mainly through products contaminated by infected bats, such as fruit

DHAKA: The World Health Organization said on Friday that a woman ​had died in northern Bangladesh in January after contracting the deadly Nipah virus infection.
The case in Bangladesh, where Nipah cases are reported almost every year, follows two Nipah virus cases identified in neighboring India, which has already prompted stepped-up airport screenings across Asia.
The patient in Bangladesh, ‌aged between 40-50 ‌years, developed symptoms consistent with ‌Nipah ⁠virus ​on ‌January 21, including fever and headache followed by hypersalivation, disorientation and convulsion, the WHO added.
She died a week later and was confirmed to be infected with the virus a day later.
The person had no travel history but had a history of consuming ⁠raw date palm sap. All 35 people who had contact ‌with the patient are being monitored ‍and have tested ‍negative for the virus, and no further cases ‍have been detected to date, the WHO said.
Nipah is an infection that spreads mainly through products contaminated by infected bats, such as fruit. It can be fatal ​in up to 75 percent of cases, but it does not spread easily between people.
Countries including ⁠Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, and Pakistan implemented temperature screenings at airports after India said cases of the virus had been found in West Bengal.
The WHO said on Friday that the risk of international disease spread is considered low and that it does not recommend any travel or trade restrictions based on current information.
In 2025, four laboratory-confirmed fatal cases were reported in Bangladesh.
There are currently no licensed ‌medicines or vaccines specific for the infection.