The Borneo Post

China’s smoggiest city closes schools

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SHIJIAZHUA­NG, China: China’s smoggiest city closed schools yesterday as much of the country suffered its sixth day under an oppressive haze, sparking public anger about the slow response to the threat to children’s health.

Since Friday a choking miasma has covered a large swathe of northeaste­rn China, leaving more than 460 million gasping for breath.

Shijiazhua­ng, the capital of Hebei province, was one of more than 20 cities which went on red alert Friday evening, triggering an emergency plan to reduce pollution by shutting polluting factories and taking cars off the road, among other measures.

Nowhere has been hit as hard as Shijiazhua­ng, which has seen a huge rise in pollution.

But the city’s education department waited until Tuesday evening to announce it was closing elementary schools and kindergart­ens, following similar moves in nearby Beijing and Tianjin. The announceme­nt said middle and high schools could close on a voluntary basis.

The statement on the education department’s official social media account provoked anger.

“Are middle school students’ bodies’ air purifiers?” one incredulou­s commentato­r asked, adding: “Are you going to wait for us all to become sick before you step up to fix this?”

A picture from neighbouri­ng Henan province, showing more than 400 students sitting an exam on a football pitch after their school was forced to close, was widely circulated on social media and further fuelled discontent.

The streets of Shijiazhua­ng, population 10.7 million, reeked of coal smoke Wednesday as pedestrian­s and cyclists flitted through a thick grey haze that reduced buildings silhouette­s.

Only a handful wore the white disposable masks that have become increasing­ly common in Beijing since the government to gauzy issued its first- ever red alert last December.

“I don’t like this pollution but I have to work,” street sweeper Dong Xiai, 44, told AFP, adding his workmates do not wear masks because the city does not provide them.

Shijiazhua­ng has seen 10 bouts of serious air pollution so far this winter, according to the China Daily newspaper, putting it top of the environmen­t ministry’s list of cities with the worst air quality.

Over the last 48 hours, levels of PM 10 – a measure of particulat­es in the atmosphere – have been literally off the charts in the city, repeatedly maxing out at 999.

Levels of the smaller PM 2.5 particles, tiny enough to be absorbed into the bloodstrea­m and thought to be a major contributo­r to respirator­y and cardiovasc­ular disease, reached as high as 733, more than 29 times the World Health Organizati­on’s daily recommende­d maximum of 25.

The industrial city is known for its pharmaceut­ical and textiles industries, both major sources of pollution.

But the likely explanatio­n for the choking haze are steel mills and coal mines in the surroundin­g province of Hebei.

Last month the environmen­t ministry said pollution had worsened in October over the same period last year, despite a generally positive trend in air quality. — AFP

 ??  ?? Trucks are seen stranded near a highway during a polluted day in Shijiazhua­ng, Hebei province, China. — Reuters photo
Trucks are seen stranded near a highway during a polluted day in Shijiazhua­ng, Hebei province, China. — Reuters photo

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