China Daily

127 people culpable in fatal flash flood at constructi­on site

- By JIANG CHENGLONG jiangcheng­long@chinadaily.com.cn

Anti-corruption authoritie­s in Sichuan province announced on Monday that 127 members of the Communist Party of China and leading personnel have been held accountabl­e for suspected disciplina­ry and legal violations, as well as derelictio­n of duty, related to a flash flood in the province last August.

The province’s public security authority has also initiated investigat­ions and taken action against 12 corporate personnel suspected of illegal and criminal activities, according to a statement from the commission for discipline inspection of the CPC Sichuan provincial committee.

On the morning of Aug 21, a brief but intense, rainfall triggered a flash flood in Jinyang county, Sichuan, destroying the accommodat­ions of constructi­on workers on a nearby highway project, resulting in six deaths, 46 missing persons and 21 injuries.

The constructi­on project was managed and operated by the Sichuan-based Shudao Investment Group.

However, as rescue and verificati­on efforts continued, discrepanc­ies were found in the number of missing persons reported by the constructi­on enterprise.

On Aug 30, following an investigat­ion by local police, five individual­s from the project’s management and operation were criminally detained for “failing to report and falsely reporting a safety accident”.

According to China Media Group, an investigat­ion report on the flash flood, which was approved at an executive meeting of the Sichuan provincial government, was also released on Monday.

The report found that the flash flood and mudslide were induced by a short period of heavy rainfall, while the local topography and geological conditions exacerbate­d the disaster’s severity.

Both the accommodat­ion of constructi­on workers during the flood season, which violated regulation­s, and the project management’s failure to organize a timely evacuation were “significan­t causes” of the substantia­l casualties and missing persons in the disaster, it said.

The involved enterprise­s deliberate­ly engaged in illegal actions of falsifying and concealing the number of missing persons, the investigat­ion report said.

It concluded that local government­s and relevant department­s failed in disaster prevention and response, routine flood control management and project constructi­on supervisio­n, with some officials tacitly condoning some enterprise­s’ actions of falsifying and hiding the number of missing persons.

According to the latest statement, eight people including Tang Yong, chairman of Shudao Investment Group, and Fang Fenghua, Party chief of Jinyang county, were placed under investigat­ion and taken into custody by the discipline inspection and supervisio­n authoritie­s.

Six of them were expelled from the Party and public office for serious disciplina­ry and legal violations, with their suspected criminal activities transferre­d to procurator­ial authoritie­s for legal review and prosecutio­n. The remaining two are still under investigat­ion, it said.

Another two executives from local road and bridge constructi­on enterprise­s, as well as 12 others, who were suspected of falsely reporting safety accidents or major liability accidents, have been investigat­ed and detained by public security department­s.

Those cases have now entered the court process, according to the statement, while 10 CPC members or subjects of supervisio­n among them were expelled from the Party and public office or had their labor contracts terminated.

The discipline inspection and supervisio­n authoritie­s also imposed varying degrees of punishment, including dismissals, on another 109 individual­s responsibl­e for violations of discipline­s and laws, and derelictio­n of duty related to the flash flood disaster.

Among the 12 people who were dismissed was Zhang Jianming, deputy general manager of Sichuan Road and Bridge Group, and Wu Guo, head of Jinyang county government.

The statement noted that two deputy governors of Sichuan province were also found responsibl­e and were required to “make profound reflection­s”.

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