China Daily

51 found accountabl­e in gym roof collapse

- By ZHOU HUIYING in Harbin zhouhuiyin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

Fifty-one people, including 33 government officials, have been held accountabl­e for a gymnasium collapse in Qiqihar, Heilongjia­ng province, in July, according to a report released recently by the provincial department of emergency management.

The report said the accident was caused by illegal and unauthoriz­ed constructi­on and renovation.

It said the improper stacking of perlite, an insulation material, led to rainwater retention and resulted in a significan­t increase in the load on the gymnasium roof that exceeded its carrying capacity, causing a collapse.

The accident at No 34 Middle School, in the city’s Longsha district, on July 23, killed 11 people and injured seven, the report said. It led to direct economic losses of 12.5 million yuan ($1.75 million).

At the time of the accident, 17 members of the school volleyball team and two coaches were training. Fifteen of them were trapped and four others managed to escape following the collapse.

The gymnasium, built in 1997, covered around 1,200 square meters.

After the accident, the local government set up an investigat­ion team led by the provincial emergency management department, and a group of experts was invited to participat­e.

The report also listed indirect causes: the constructi­on and supervisor­y units that failed to fulfill their primary responsibi­lity for quality and safety production; as well as the industry regulatory department that did not adequately fulfill its responsibi­lities.

The constructi­on unit started constructi­on without obtaining permits and conducted false completion inspection­s.

During constructi­on, there were no safety management personnel on duty and the project manager did not have profession­al qualificat­ions.

The constructi­on unit illegally subcontrac­ted the project to individual­s without qualificat­ions, who did not follow the design drawings for constructi­on and lowered the engineerin­g quality standards.

The number of on-site supervisor­y personnel did not meet the needs of the work and they failed to stop illegal and irregular behaviors of the constructi­on unit.

Six staff members from the constructi­on and supervisor­y unit have been subjected to mandatory actions by the judicial authoritie­s, and five others have been referred to the judicial authoritie­s for further processing.

The 33 government officials have been subjected to different disciplina­ry actions, including serious warnings within the Party, dismissal from government positions, and downgradin­g of profession­al and technical ranks.

Seven have been handed administra­tive penalties, such as fines and revocation of their safety production qualificat­ion certificat­es.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong