<p>Cuba asked for help Saturday to contain a massive fire at a fuel depot that has left at least one person dead, 121 people injured and 17 firefighters missing.</p>.<p>Some 1,900 people have been evacuated from the affected area, according to officials from the western Matanzas province, where lightning struck a fuel tank late Friday, triggering an explosion.</p>.<p>Provincial health official Luis Armando Wong told a press conference Saturday evening a first body had been recovered at the site.</p>.<p>Five people were critically injured, according to an update by the Cuban presidency on Twitter, with three others in a very serious condition in hospital.</p>.<p>The wounded included Energy Minister Livan Arronte.</p>.<p>The president's office said 17 firefighters were missing, those "who were closest" to the fire in an industrial zone of Matanzas, a city some 100 kilometers (62 miles) east of Havana.</p>.<p>"Cuba requested help and advice from friendly countries with experience in fuel" to help put out the fire, the presidency added in a statement.</p>.<p>Later in the day, President Miguel Diaz-Canel expressed thanks to the governments of Mexico, Venezuela, Russia, Nicaragua, Argentina and Chile, "which have promptly offered material aid."</p>.<p>"We also appreciate the offer of technical advice from the US," he added.</p>.<p>The US embassy in Havana said on Twitter: "We want to make clear that US law authorizes US entities and organizations to provide disaster relief and response in Cuba."</p>.<p>The United States has had sanctions against the one-party Communist state for six decades.</p>.<p>The fire broke out after a bolt of lightning struck a tank Friday at the depot on the outskirts of Matanzas, a city of 140,000 people.</p>.<p>By the early hours of Saturday, the fire had spread to a second tank, causing another blast and sending a huge plume of black smoke into the sky.</p>.<p>Helicopters were hard at work fighting the blaze on Saturday, with ambulances, water tanks and cranes at the scene.</p>.<p>Exhausted firefighters were gathered at the plant, waiting to enter to look for their comrades who seemingly could not escape the second explosion.</p>.<p>"We felt the blast, like a shock wave that pushed you back," Laura Martinez, a resident of La Ganadera, near the disaster zone, told AFP.</p>.<p>Upon hearing the first explosion, 32-year-old Yuney Hernandez and her children fled their home just two kilometers from the depot. They returned a few hours later.</p>.<p>Then, they heard more blasts in the early morning hours, "like pieces of the tank were falling," she said.</p>.<p>Ginelva Hernandez, 33, said she, her husband and three children were asleep when the explosions rang out.</p>.<p>"We threw ourselves out of bed; when we went out to the street, the sky was yellow," she told AFP.</p>.<p>"The fear of people on the street is uncontrollable," she added.</p>.<p>Diaz-Canel said extinguishing the blaze "could take time," while Asbel Leal, director of the Cupet state oil company, said the country had never experienced a fire "of the magnitude we have today."</p>.<p>According to Cupet, the first tank contained about 26,000 cubic meters of crude, about half its capacity, when it was struck by lightning.</p>.<p>The second contained 52,000 cubic meters of fuel oil.</p>.<p>Official newspaper Granma reported the fire was likely due to "a fault in the lightning-rod system, which could not withstand the energy from the electrical discharge."</p>.<p>The depot supplies the Antonio Guiteras thermoelectric plant, the largest in Cuba, but service to the plant has not been interrupted, the official said.</p>.<p>The disaster comes at a time when the island -- with an outdated energy network and persistent fuel shortages -- has faced mounting difficulties in meeting increased energy demands amid severe summer heat.</p>.<p>Since May, authorities have imposed energy blackouts of up to 12 hours a day in some regions -- sparking at least 20 protests around the Portugal-sized nation of 11 million people.</p>
<p>Cuba asked for help Saturday to contain a massive fire at a fuel depot that has left at least one person dead, 121 people injured and 17 firefighters missing.</p>.<p>Some 1,900 people have been evacuated from the affected area, according to officials from the western Matanzas province, where lightning struck a fuel tank late Friday, triggering an explosion.</p>.<p>Provincial health official Luis Armando Wong told a press conference Saturday evening a first body had been recovered at the site.</p>.<p>Five people were critically injured, according to an update by the Cuban presidency on Twitter, with three others in a very serious condition in hospital.</p>.<p>The wounded included Energy Minister Livan Arronte.</p>.<p>The president's office said 17 firefighters were missing, those "who were closest" to the fire in an industrial zone of Matanzas, a city some 100 kilometers (62 miles) east of Havana.</p>.<p>"Cuba requested help and advice from friendly countries with experience in fuel" to help put out the fire, the presidency added in a statement.</p>.<p>Later in the day, President Miguel Diaz-Canel expressed thanks to the governments of Mexico, Venezuela, Russia, Nicaragua, Argentina and Chile, "which have promptly offered material aid."</p>.<p>"We also appreciate the offer of technical advice from the US," he added.</p>.<p>The US embassy in Havana said on Twitter: "We want to make clear that US law authorizes US entities and organizations to provide disaster relief and response in Cuba."</p>.<p>The United States has had sanctions against the one-party Communist state for six decades.</p>.<p>The fire broke out after a bolt of lightning struck a tank Friday at the depot on the outskirts of Matanzas, a city of 140,000 people.</p>.<p>By the early hours of Saturday, the fire had spread to a second tank, causing another blast and sending a huge plume of black smoke into the sky.</p>.<p>Helicopters were hard at work fighting the blaze on Saturday, with ambulances, water tanks and cranes at the scene.</p>.<p>Exhausted firefighters were gathered at the plant, waiting to enter to look for their comrades who seemingly could not escape the second explosion.</p>.<p>"We felt the blast, like a shock wave that pushed you back," Laura Martinez, a resident of La Ganadera, near the disaster zone, told AFP.</p>.<p>Upon hearing the first explosion, 32-year-old Yuney Hernandez and her children fled their home just two kilometers from the depot. They returned a few hours later.</p>.<p>Then, they heard more blasts in the early morning hours, "like pieces of the tank were falling," she said.</p>.<p>Ginelva Hernandez, 33, said she, her husband and three children were asleep when the explosions rang out.</p>.<p>"We threw ourselves out of bed; when we went out to the street, the sky was yellow," she told AFP.</p>.<p>"The fear of people on the street is uncontrollable," she added.</p>.<p>Diaz-Canel said extinguishing the blaze "could take time," while Asbel Leal, director of the Cupet state oil company, said the country had never experienced a fire "of the magnitude we have today."</p>.<p>According to Cupet, the first tank contained about 26,000 cubic meters of crude, about half its capacity, when it was struck by lightning.</p>.<p>The second contained 52,000 cubic meters of fuel oil.</p>.<p>Official newspaper Granma reported the fire was likely due to "a fault in the lightning-rod system, which could not withstand the energy from the electrical discharge."</p>.<p>The depot supplies the Antonio Guiteras thermoelectric plant, the largest in Cuba, but service to the plant has not been interrupted, the official said.</p>.<p>The disaster comes at a time when the island -- with an outdated energy network and persistent fuel shortages -- has faced mounting difficulties in meeting increased energy demands amid severe summer heat.</p>.<p>Since May, authorities have imposed energy blackouts of up to 12 hours a day in some regions -- sparking at least 20 protests around the Portugal-sized nation of 11 million people.</p>