China Daily (Hong Kong)

24 dead in Mexican town where fireworks disasters common

-

TULTEPEC, Mexico — First a horrific blast rocked the town of Tultepec, a place already notorious for deadly fireworks accidents, and emergency workers rushed in to rescue the injured.

Then, 20 minutes later, a new series of explosions erupted around them, killing at least four firefighte­rs, two police officers and a civil defense worker. In all, at least 24 people died and at least 49 were injured on Thursday, according to the government of the state of Mexico.

“They wanted to save lives without knowing that the same thing was going to happen to them,” said Teresa Gonzalez, who heard the nearby blasts that began at 9:40 am.

Tultepec, a municipali­ty of about 130,000 people roughly an hour’s drive north of Mexico City, is famed for small workshops that produce many of the fireworks used throughout the region and for repeated accidents that have killed at least 70 people in less than two years.

Guadalupe Romero, another town resident, stopped short of saying the town’s fireworks industry should be shut down, because he knows so many of the area’s families depend on it.

But he said that between a nearby propane gas plant and the fireworks production, “we are sitting on a time bomb”.

“Yes, we’re scared,” the 64-year-old merchant said.

Luis Felipe Puente, head of Mexico’s civil defense agency, said the workshops that exploded were “clandestin­e”. But they were located within an area specifical­ly marked out for the production of pyrotechni­cs. State and federal officials had promised, after earlier disasters, to impose safety restrictio­ns in such areas.

Along the road were brightly painted buildings labeled with “danger” warnings. There was even a guard shack inside a shabby chain link fence.

The shops that blew up apparently didn’t have the required permits issued by the Mexican army to store explosive materials, but that’s the case for many of the family-based businesses.

Video images showed a massive plume of smoke rising after the explosion. Journalist­s arriving later found wrecked buildings and scorched ground amid a rural patch of modest homes and small farm plots.

Helicopter­s took the wounded to several hospitals, and more than 300 police officers were dispatched to the scene.

Safety measures at such workshops and markets have been a matter of constant debate in Mexico, where festivals big and small feature small rockets and percussion bombs, often at close range of spectators, and where individual­s often set off firecracke­rs in the streets.

“We cannot continue to allow this kind of situation,” Puente told the Milenio news network.

Tultepec is known for making the fireworks that Mexicans traditiona­lly use to celebrate holidays and saints’ days. It has been hit by devastatin­g explosions in the past.

On Dec 20, 2016, 42 people were killed and 70 injured in a series of spectacula­r explosions at Tultepec’s San Pablito market, the largest fireworks market in the country.

Deadly fireworks explosions have occurred repeatedly elsewhere in Mexico. A 1988, fireworks blast in Mexico City’s enormous La Merced market killed at least 68, prompting a generally ignored prohibitio­n on the sale of fireworks in the city.

In 1999, 63 people died when an explosion of stored fireworks destroyed part of the city of Celaya.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China