China Daily

Poor supervisio­n led to fatal fire

- By DU JUAN dujuan@chinadaily.com.cn

A high-level investigat­ion into a Beijing apartment building fire that killed 19 people in November has concluded that the tragedy was caused by a combinatio­n of illegal practices and poor supervisio­n.

Flames tore through the five-story Jufuyuan complex in Xihongmen township, part of the capital’s Daxing district, on Nov 18 after an electrical fault occurred during testing of a new basement cold-storage unit.

More than 400 residents lived in the structure, which also housed workshops, storage units and other businesses — most of them unlicensed.

Most of the victims died from inhaling toxic carbon monoxide fumes. Another eight people were injured but survived.

On Monday, a central government inspection team sent by the State Council published its findings after conducting 300 interviews and examining 2,000 documents and other materials over the past seven months.

The team concluded that the building had illegal interior constructi­on, with many residences converted into small, overcrowde­d rented dormitorie­s that created a serious fire hazard.

Safety problems had existed for a long time, and the township government, as well as police and fire department­s, had failed in their duty to provide sufficient oversight, the report said.

The local commerce department was also accused of indirectly causing the blaze by not regulating the businesses that were based in the illegal structures.

Police detained 15 people in connection with the fire, including Fan Zhaotian, the building’s owner, who is accused of illegal constructi­on, the investigat­ive report said. It did not provide details on the other suspects.

Du Zhiyong, deputy head of Daxing, along with 20 other government officials, received punishment within the Communist Party of China, it added without elaboratin­g.

Beijing Kangte Wood Co, which rented out rooms in the Jufuyuan complex, was among the three companies fined a total of 9.6 million yuan ($1.47 million) by the Beijing Administra­tion of Work Safety, the report said.

The investigat­ors called for Daxing district and related department­s to stop illegal constructi­on and businesses in the area, eliminate potential safety risks and strengthen the management of rentals.

The fire started in a basement area of 5,000 square meters that housed six coldstorag­e units. The first floor was rented out to restaurant­s, shops and small manufactur­ing businesses. The second and third floors had living spaces with a total area of 8,300 square meters. Its 305 rooms were rife with safety hazards, investigat­ors found.

After the fire, the Beijing city government launched a 40-day citywide campaign aimed at eliminatin­g fire hazards and other safety problems in crowded apartments and warehouses that function as storage areas, workshops or residences for workers.

According to a local resident who asked not to be named, many warehouses in Xihongmen failed to pass fire and safety assessment­s and had to be closed after the fire.

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