A night of music and community celebration in Anambra was violently ripped apart in an instant, transformed into a scene of screaming chaos and carnage after a massive fireworks explosion tore through a crowded carnival, killing at least two people and maiming scores of others, including young children.
The tragedy struck on the evening of December 29, 2025, in Umuchu, Anambra State. As hundreds gathered for a local carnival, a powerful “knockout” firework—a banned and highly explosive device—detonated without warning near the main stage. The blast was not a colourful display but a concussive, deadly event that sent shrapnel and panic through the heart of the festival.

“Children Among the Worst Affected”
Eyewitnesses described a scene of pure devastation in the aftermath. One victim, identified as Ugochi, was killed instantly at the scene. Another succumbed to horrific injuries in a hospital in the early hours of Tuesday. Several others, including an unspecified number of children, suffered severe burns and deep lacerations, with many rushed to medical facilities in critical condition.
The festive stage, once a focal point of joy, became a triage zone as locals scrambled to help the wounded amidst the screams and confusion.
Community Leadership Silent, Police Yet to Act
In the shocking wake of the disaster, a troubling silence has fallen over the official response. Community leaders have remained largely mute, a move locals fear is an attempt to downplay the severity of the incident and avoid scrutiny. The Anambra State Police Command has also failed to issue any official statement or launch a public investigation, leaving a vacuum of accountability.
This official inertia has sparked fury and fear among residents, who are now demanding a full probe into how such dangerous, illegal pyrotechnics were allowed at a public event. The unanswered questions are as explosive as the device itself: Who supplied the banned fireworks? Who authorized their use? And why has there been no immediate action from those sworn to protect the public?
The Umuchu carnival will now be remembered not for its music or dance, but for the moment a symbol of celebration was weaponized into an instrument of death—a deadly nightmare born from negligence, leaving a community to mourn its dead and demand answers that, so far, no one in power is willing to give.















