China Daily (Hong Kong)

Transparen­cy best way to quell pollution concerns

-

It is now clear that on Nov 4, 69.1 metric tons of the petroleum derivative C9 — rather than 6.97 tons as previously reported — leaked into the sea off Quanzhou, the most populous city in Fujian province. The local government announced the results of the official investigat­ion on Sunday, three weeks after the leak of the chemical that is toxic to humans and has already sickened more than 50 people and affected 20 hectares of aquatic farms, causing millions of yuan in economic loss. The authoritie­s said on Sunday that Fujian Donggang Petrochemi­cal Industry had deliberate­ly concealed and forged evidence to hide the true extent of the leak and some local officials had failed to play their supervisor­y role. Seven people have been detained.

The incident has once again exposed local officials need to improve their response to emergencie­s.

After the incident broke out, instead of trying to find out the exact amount of the leak by using profession­al methods, the local environmen­tal officials just accepted the figure given by the company. Worse, they rushed to announce that all air and seawater pollution indexes were improving and back to normal, causing some credulous local residents who took part in cleanup work without any protection gear to fall sick.

Rather than halting all classes and outdoor activities for school students, as required when an environmen­tal emergency occurs, the local education department failed to notify teachers and parents of the possible dangers and classes continued as normal.

And rather than keeping the public well-informed, local police “accompanie­d” reporters, and one journalist from Caixin disclosed how she was tailed, prevented from taking pictures, and harassed by police when trying to investigat­e the incident.

In the face of the continuous public doubts over the scale of the pollution, the local officials repeatedly asked the local people not to believe and spread rumors, rather than addressing their concerns with timely updates on the findings of their investigat­ion.

It was pure luck that the leak this time was not any larger, or the consequenc­es could have been more devastatin­g. Still it will take a long time for the damage done to the credibilit­y of the local government to be repaired.

This is a lesson that should be learned by all government officials nationwide.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China