Lightning blamed as Malaysia tanker explodes

In this handout photograph released by Malaysian Maritime, Malaysian tanker Bunga Alpinia burns at a jetty in Labuan. The tanker exploded as it was being loaded with methanol Thursday leaving one crew member dead and four missing, police said, blaming a bolt of lightning

A Malaysian tanker exploded as it was being loaded with methanol Thursday leaving one crew member dead and four missing, police said, blaming a bolt of lightning. The accident happened at a methanol terminal run by national energy firm Petronas on the South China Sea island of Labuan, off Borneo, said the ship's operating company MISC. Three loud blasts rocked the island and the 38,000-tonne Bunga Alpinia was left about "80 percent destroyed", Labuan police chief Saiman Kasran told AFP. "There was heavy rain and lightning at that time," he said. "We presume the fire was caused by a lightning strike. We found one body and four crew members are missing." MISC, which is a subsidiary of Petronas, said in a statement the chemical and palm oil tanker had 29 people on board -- 23 Malaysians and six Filipinos -- and 24 were brought ashore safely. It gave no further details.