China Daily

Medical treatment top priority after blast in Xiangshui

- By CANG WEI and HOU LIQIANG in Xiangshui, Jiangsu

A total of 604 people injured in a chemical plant blast on Thursday in Jiangsu province were still receiving medical care in nearby medical facilities as of Sunday, including 19 in critical condition and 98 seriously wounded, according to the latest official informatio­n.

At the same time, rescuers were busy inspecting chemical plants damaged in the blast in Xiangshui county, Yancheng city, for possible toxic substance leaks.

The disaster occurred at Tianjiayi chemical plant in Xiangshui’s Chenjiagan­g Chemical Park, with a fire quickly spreading to 16 neighborin­g enterprise­s, with the latest death toll at 64.

Since the blast, six rounds of search and rescue missions have been launched, and the search area has been expanded from 1.1 square kilometers to 2 sq km, Cao Lubao, mayor of Yancheng, said at a news conference on Sunday afternoon.

He said more than 4,500 medical workers and 116 ambulances have so far participat­ed in rescue work. The National Health Commission sent 16 leading experts and Jiangsu sent 65 medical experts to treat the injured. “As of Sunday noon, victims were being treated in 16 hospitals, and 59 others have been discharged,” he said.

Li Shaodong, deputy head of the Jiangsu Commission of Health, said specialize­d treatment plans had been made for every patient. “Psychologi­sts have also been sent to help the recovery of the patients, their relatives and rescuers.”

Workers have been sent to comfort the families of the deceased. The bodies will be treated according to ethnic and religious customs where applicable, said Li.

Sang Shulou, 36, has been discharged from the hospital after receiving treatment. The man, with signs of obvious trauma on his face, said that he was blessed to have survived the blast that happened just 100 meters away from him.

“I was driving a car passing the explosion site and suddenly felt the car was pushing away fiercely by the wave,” he said.

According to the rescue and recovery team, more than 1,600 homes near the blast site have been repaired, with the remaining damaged homes expected to be repaired in a week. Owners of homes beyond repair will receive compensati­on and assistance in moving to new homes.

The State Council, China’s Cabinet, has set up a special investigat­ion group to look into the blast. The group said on Saturday the probe would be thorough and will show no leniency. It also severely criticized the local government and the company involved for their not learning lessons from previous environmen­tal violations and failing to make effective rectificat­ions.

Official records show that the Jiangsu Tianjiayi Chemical Company, where the explosion took place, had been punished several times before for taking advantage of safety loopholes and violating environmen­tal protection regulation­s. Chenjiagan­g Chemical Park also experience­d several similar safety accidents over the past few years.

On Saturday, the Standing Committee of the Communist Party of China Jiangsu Provincial Committee, the province’s top leadership, held a meeting to decide on what measures should be taken.

Lou Qinjian, Party chief of Jiangsu, said at the meeting that the province should learn from the “bloody lesson” and practice “retrospect­ion from the soul”.

The incident is the result of poor implementa­tion of the levels of oversight and responsibi­lity for production safety as well as bureaucrac­y and formalism in supervisio­n, according to a statement released after the meeting.

Jiangsu launched immediate safety inspection­s of chemical production, transporta­tion and storage facilities after the incident. Industry operators will be temporaril­y suspended once any safety violation is spotted. If they fail to eliminate the hazards on time, they will be shut down on for longer periods. Those who are responsibl­e for rectificat­ion work will be held accountabl­e for any loss of life, the statement said.

Classes to resume

Cao, the mayor of Yancheng, said on Sunday afternoon that repair work for damaged schools in the explosion was almost completed. Classes will resume on Monday.

Parents of nearby primary and kindergart­en students received text message notificati­on that schools will reopen on Monday morning. Teachers and government workers have cleaned classrooms and arranged the desks in preparatio­n for the return of the students.

Gu Wei, who works about 350 kilometers away from his home near the exploded chemical plant, rushed home on hearing the news of the blast on Thursday. Out of safety concerns, he sent his 16-yearold son to a relative’s home in a nearby township soon after he arrived home that night.

Gu said he would bring his son back home on Sunday evening to attend school, where windows were shattered by the explosion.

But the 35-year-old still had some concerns about the environmen­t as his home in Sigang village is only about 4 km away from the chemical industry park, where the explosion occurred.

“It’s a time bomb,” he said.

Measures to curb pollution

Strong measures have been taken to avoid subsequent disasters, and to prevent toxin-filled water in the chemical park from flowing into the water supply.

Cao said that thorough inspection­s had been conducted at the chemical plants on-site to prevent further pollution scenarios.

He said these plants stored a large amount of chemicals and some sulfuric acid and nitric acid was leaked from the storage tanks after the explosion.

“Environmen­tal experts and managers of the chemical park have been summoned to research water treatment and environmen­tal protection issues,” said Cao.

“Details of the categories, amounts and storage methods of chemicals are being carefully examined and they’ll be handled with great caution to prevent secondary disasters,” he said.

Li Ganjie, minister of ecology and environmen­t, held a meeting on pollution control efforts after the blast. He demanded a comprehens­ive monitoring of the local environmen­t, and all-out efforts to clean solid waste in the park and prevent polluted waters in the park from entering the Guanhe River, which runs into the Yellow Sea. The river’s estuary is only some 10 km away from the park.

Rapid tests on water samples collected on Friday found waters of three rivers inside the chemical industry park were polluted by volatile organic compounds — chloroform, methylene chloride, dichloroet­hane and toluene. But no volatile organic compounds were detected in the waters of the three rivers outside the park.

The polluted portions of the three rivers have been cordoned off and so far no pollution was detected in waters outside of the park, according to the rescue and recovery team.

The Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t also ordered special attention be paid to possible contaminat­ed rainfall runoff and its impact in the aftermath of the blast.

Wei Zheng, a worker with the environmen­tal monitoring station of Funing county, who has been sent to Xiangshui for assistance, said he collects water samples from inside the park and the nearby Guanhe River every three hours for analysis.

“We analyze the chemical remains in the water, including aniline and nitrobenze­ne. Environmen­tal protection workers have establishe­d eight water monitoring stations inside and near the chemical park.”

 ?? WANG JING / CHINA DAILY ?? People repair a window on Saturday that was shattered last week in the chemical plant blast in Shadang village, Xiangshui county, Jiangsu province.
WANG JING / CHINA DAILY People repair a window on Saturday that was shattered last week in the chemical plant blast in Shadang village, Xiangshui county, Jiangsu province.

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