A downtown district of the southern Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung was 
ripped apart just before midnight Thursday by a series of explosions 
that killed at least 26 people and injured hundreds more, state news 
agency CNA reported.The blasts, which were 
triggered by underground gas leaks, tore trenches through main roads, 
overturned cars and trucks, and sent flames leaping into the air in the 
city's Cianjhen district.Witnesses said they saw vehicles flung into the air by the force of the explosions; one car was found on the roof of a three-story building.Zong Han-Li was driving 
when the explosion happened directly in front of him, and his dashboard 
camera caught the moment the gas ignited.
"The video
 went black after a rock struck the dash cam and dislocated it," he told
 CNN. "I was scared that more rocks will follow, so I opened the door 
and looked around for help. I was very fortunate the driver's door was 
not stuck."The explosion left a 
trench 2 meters deep. Some vehicles were blasted into the air, and some 
people fell into the trench. It was a devastating scene.
Read: Gas explosions rip through city"It was very loud when 
the explosion happened, (and) debris was blasted into the sky. 
Motorcycles were tossed as high as three stories. Everyone came out to 
help because there were already injuries."Two people were blown to the roof of a four-story building, where emergency workers found them and took them to the hospital, CNA reported.
Firefighters from 
neighboring cities rushed to Kaohsiung to help battle several fires, 
which had been mostly contained by Friday morning.
At least 26 people were 
killed, including four firefighters. Twenty-two emergency workers were 
among 267 people injured, officials said. A number of people were still 
missing, including a senior fire official who went to investigate 
reports of a gas leak.As daylight broke, the extent of the damage became clear, with wrecked cars and motorcycles strewn across the cratered streets.
Dave Flynn, an English 
expatriate who has lived in the city for several years, visited the site
 of the explosions Friday morning. He said a huge trench had been gouged
 along the length of a main thoroughfare for several kilometers, and the
 pavement had been thrown to the side of the road, damaging vehicles.
"There were police 
cordons on the major intersections, but they were just stopping 
vehicles," he said. "Most of the side streets, you could just walk into 
the area, and it was full of pedestrians checking out what had happened.
 I saw people fixing their own houses, and I saw the army arrive, some 
trucks to clean up some of the (wrecked) cars."Schools and offices in 
the Cianjhen district, as well as in the neighboring Lingya district, 
were closed Friday to facilitate rescue efforts, Mayor Chen Chu said. 
Several schools and a cultural center are being used as emergency shelters.
Authorities suspect ethylene, propane or butane in the explosions. There are several petrochemical factories in the region.The government called up hundreds of soldiers to assist in search and rescue efforts.
 
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