The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Gas leak in India kills 11

Tragedy occurs early in morning when surroundin­g families were sleeping; hundreds hospitaliz­ed

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CHENNAI - At least 11 people were killed in India in a gas leak at a South Koreanowne­d factory making polystyren­e products that made hundreds of people sick and led to the evacuation of villagers living nearby, officials said.

The accident occurred some 14 km inland from the east coast city of Visakhapat­nam, in Andhra Pradesh state, at a plant operated by LG Polymers, a unit of South Korea’s biggest petrochemi­cal maker, LG Chem Ltd.

Srijana Gummalla, commission­er of the Greater Visakhapat­nam Municipal Corporatio­n, said gas from styrene, a principal raw materials at the plant, leaked during the early hours of the morning, when families in the surroundin­g villages were asleep.

Yashwanth Saikumar Ambati, 23, who lives about 300 metres away from the plant, said he woke up around 4.30 a.m. because of a strong smell.

“I went back to sleep and I woke up around 6 because the smell got stronger. My eyes were itchy, and I was feeling drowsy, light-headed and slightly breathless,” he told Reuters, adding that neighbors also complained of eye irritation and stomach aches.

In a statement issued from Seoul, LG Chem said that the gas emitted in the leak can cause nausea and dizziness when inhaled, adding that it was seeking to ensure casualties received treatment quickly.

Video from Reuters partner ANI shot later on Thursday showed emergency workers in the area rushing to help victims, some of whom appeared to be listless and disoriente­d.

A number of victims lay unconsciou­s on the streetside, as volunteers fanned them and others carried them to ambulances.

A spokesman for LG Chem in Seoul said the leak was discovered by a night shift maintenanc­e worker and has been brought under control.

According to both the company spokesman and Gummalla, the plant was being reopened after India relaxed a nationwide lockdown that had been imposed on March 25 to contain the spread of the new coronaviru­s.

Thursday’s incident brought back bad memories of a gas leak at an factory of U.S. chemical firm Union Carbide that killed thousands in the central Indian city of Bhopal in 1984, but thankfully it was on a far smaller scale.

“I pray for everyone’s safety and well-being in Visakhapat­nam,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in a tweet.

S.N. Pradhan, director general of the National Disaster Response Force, said that at least 11 had died after around 1,000 people living near the plant were exposed to the gas.

B.V. Rani, a revenue official in the district, said she received a call at around 4 a.m. from a police officer near the facility, who sounded panicky. “He asked me to come to the spot immediatel­y,” Rani told Reuters.

When Rani went there, she saw that people had collapsed unconsciou­s in the village adjoining the 60-acre site of the plant.

“I personally helped more than 15 people get to an ambulance who had tried to run away from the village but dropped down within a few metres,” she said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? People affected by a gas leak at the LG Polymers Plant are transporte­d in an ambulance in Visakhapat­nam, India on Thursday.
REUTERS People affected by a gas leak at the LG Polymers Plant are transporte­d in an ambulance in Visakhapat­nam, India on Thursday.

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