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SunWuKong
12-28-2003, 01:28 PM
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/3353077.stm

Over 230 dead in China gas blast

The death toll from a gas well blow-out in south-west China has risen to 233, the state news agency Xinhua reports.

Local officials said the new victims were discovered in mountain villages outside the city of Chongqing.

More than 9,000 people were taken to hospital and more than 4,000 evacuated following Tuesday's explosion.

Now that the well has been blocked, an investigation has been launched which will decide if the PetroChina energy company is responsible.

Engineers on Saturday pumped 480 cubic metres of concrete into the well to seal it.

Concerns

Medical workers have disinfected eight villages close to the site of the leak and removed almost 4,000 animal carcasses which covered the area.

Concerns have been raised that local drinking water supplies and soil could be contaminated.

But Xinhua reports that many residents are now being allowed back to their homes after their villages were confirmed safe.

Only those whose houses lie within a five-kilometre (three-mile) radius of the leak are not allowed to return.

"I want to clean up my house and count my losses because we can't smell the fumes now," one farmer told Xinhua.

China's Ministry of Civil Affairs has sent more than 10,000 quilts and 300 tons of food and medicine to the area.

'Zone of death'

This was China's worst industrial accident - described by Chinese media as a "zone of death".

Many of the confirmed dead are children or elderly people who were unable to flee after the explosion.

A local newspaper in Chongqing described peasants racing to get away after catching "a whiff of the smell of stinky duck eggs" - deadly sulphurated hydrogen.

Those who did not escape in time - including farm animals and fish - suffered burns to their skin and lungs from the gas.

A woman who lived within sight of the well described grabbing her five-year-old daughter and fleeing.

"But by the time they reached safety, the girl had stopped breathing," the Chongqing Economic Times reported.

The same paper reported that a local merchant had saved 400 people by making 20 trips in his lorry to take people to safety.

China is notorious for dangerous working conditions at industrial plants.

An average of more than 10,000 people a month died in work-related accidents from January to September this year.

That figure is a 9% rise from the same period last year - despite a government campaign to improve work safety conditions.

Ogumo
12-29-2003, 12:44 PM
That is damn terrible. When I first read this I thought this was about those poisons that the old japanese military hid in china. But this was much worse. I feel bad for these people.

kitty
12-29-2003, 12:56 PM
that's just awful... I'm glad that the people who got out were able to, but that's still an alarmingly high figure..

Ogumo
12-29-2003, 12:57 PM
The figure is high. But it could have been much worse you know. But I would not say that those were lucky....

rice cracker
12-29-2003, 01:06 PM
What a catastrophe "Many of the confirmed dead are children or elderly people who were unable to flee after the explosion." :frown:

moJo
12-29-2003, 01:23 PM
An average of more than 10,000 people a month died in work-related accidents from January to September this year.
what in the world...? i thought i was mistaken when i read this the first few times. that's an insanely huge number. :(

this is terrible. i hope there won't be any further (or minimal) deaths when dealing with the after effects, such as the contaminated water and soil...

teaz0r
12-29-2003, 01:35 PM
omigosh. that's terrible.
in 1990 a tanker carrying
liquefied petroleum gas
crashed in the middle of
one of the busiest roads of
bkk and resulted in an explosion .
60+ ppl were killed back then.
and that was so fucking devastating
i can't imagine 230. my heart goes
out to the victim's families.

what terrible news :(

SunWuKong
12-29-2003, 02:02 PM
what in the world...? i thought i was mistaken when i read this the first few times. that's an insanely huge number. :(

this is terrible. i hope there won't be any further (or minimal) deaths when dealing with the after effects, such as the contaminated water and soil...

err... a few hundred i can believe, but an average of 10K is a little high. i wonder where he got that number.

stunninglyAsian
12-29-2003, 02:19 PM
I think that the numbers are higher, but the government is padding the numbers. China has a horrible track record with human rights and look at how they reacted to SARS, they tried to cover it up and lie to the public at first. They have to be more open with the public and take the blame if they messed up.

Emperor_Mike
12-29-2003, 02:42 PM
Awful, awful news. :frown: Between this, the horrific quake in Iran, and the ongoing wars around the world, the year 2003 can be said to be an annus horribilis.

SunWuKong
12-29-2003, 03:40 PM
I think that the numbers are higher, but the government is padding the numbers. China has a horrible track record with human rights and look at how they reacted to SARS, they tried to cover it up and lie to the public at first. They have to be more open with the public and take the blame if they messed up.

yeah but according to that reporter, an average of at least 90,000 people have died of these accidents just from January to September. i don't care how secretive mainland China is, i doubt they can hide that. not in this day and age, and the way that China has opened up.

applehead
12-29-2003, 04:23 PM
oh geez.
that's awful.

amietron
12-29-2003, 05:49 PM
this comes all before the new year. =(

Faithless
12-31-2003, 08:36 AM
Regarding this quote from the article:
China is notorious for dangerous working conditions at industrial plants.
How will China respond to this in terms of improved safety?

Faithless
12-31-2003, 08:40 AM
From this article:

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2003/dec2003/chin-d31.shtml
...
A PetroChina spokesman insisted: “This kind of blow-out is not unusual during oil and gas drilling. It was the sulphurated hydrogen that made this accident so fatal.” But it is unclear what, if any, precautions the company had taken to avert such a disaster.

The Hong Kong-based Singtao Daily cited sources in Chongching City who declared that PetroChina only cared how much gas it was pumping to the provincial capital of Chengdu and had invested little in safety measures. There appeared to have been no monitoring system or alarm and no plan for the emergency evacuation in what is a heavily populated province.
...
PetroChina and the government, at all levels, have been attempting to minimise the extent of the disaster and to cover up their own responsibility. State councillor Hua Jianmin, one of President Hu Jintao’s close protégés, was dispatched to the scene to conduct an investigation and to show Beijing’s concern for the victims.
...

And the world will be monitoring, as well.

SunWuKong
12-31-2003, 08:47 AM
this kind of shit isn't going to go away until there is less corruption on the local levels.

bluemonq
12-31-2003, 02:44 PM
How will China respond to this in terms of improved safety?

I imagine it won't. So far, there hasn't been an overwhelming flood of complaints/protests on things like this. Short of some sort of boycott of all reckless companies - which is difficult to imagine happening, considering the number of those businesses - the situation's not going to improve.

Faithless
01-01-2004, 11:18 AM
In the meantime:

http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,2771684a12,00.html
Japan compensates Chinese poison gas victims
01 January 2004

BEIJING: Japan paid 300 million yen ($NZ4.33 million) compensation to China after more than 40 people fell ill from leaking barrels of mustard gas left over by Japanese forces in World War 2, Xinhua news agency said.


The bulk of the compensation went to victims from China's northeastern province of Heilongjiang while a small portion was allocated to clear the site, it said yesterday.