China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Beijing continues its safety crackdown in wake of fire

Migrant workers told to move from unsafe homes over blaze risks

- By JIANG CHENGLONG and CUI JIA Contact the writers at jiangcheng­long@chinadaily.com.cn

Beijing’s latest citywide campaign to eliminate safety hazards in crowded apartments and warehouses must be carried out to prevent tragedies like the fatal fire of Nov 19, the city’s work safety commission said on Sunday.

It added that officials should improve the way they explain things as they communicat­e with residents who are required to move out of danger.

On Nov 19, a fire in an apartment building with more than 400 residents in Xinjian village of Beijing’s Daxing district killed 19 people and injured eight.

“The building was a severe fire risk. Its ceilings were made of polystyren­e, a flammable material that burns rapidly and sends off lots of poisonous gases,” Wei Yiyu, director of fire supervisio­n for Daxing’s fire detachment, said on Sunday at the building, which had been emptied.

Gas and smoke would have spread to every room of the building quickly because the rooms’ partitions didn’t reach the ceiling. That dramatical­ly reduced the time people had to escape, he said.

“In addition, the building was very crowded — three to five people per 10 square meters,” he said. “And a majority of rooms had no windows, so it was hard to escape as poisonous gas filled the air,” Wei said.

Additional­ly, many residents had carried out do-ityourself splicing of electrical wiring, raising fire risks, he added.

After the fire, the city government launched a 40-day citywide campaign to eliminate fire and other safety hazards, in crowded apartments and warehouses that function as storage areas, workshops or residences for workers, the Beijing Work Safety Commission said.

Many densely clustered properties in former industrial areas in the suburbs of Beijing have been modified illegally, the commission said. In general, such properties cannot pass health and safety inspection­s, yet cheap rents continue to draw people in. In some old warehouses, flammable materials were used as partitions to create living spaces for several hundred people without official approval, it said.

So far, 25,309 safety hazards have been found citywide, the commission said.

People who have been living in unsafe dwellings have been asked to move out during the campaign. Some said on social media that local authoritie­s cut their electricit­y and water and told them to evacuate the next day, leaving them no time to find another home. Others said they should have been given more time to relocate because of the arrival of cold weather.

The commission said it found that enforcemen­t measures in some areas were “simple and blunt”, and urged officials to issue notices in advance and better explain the safety campaign to the public.

It denied accusation­s that the goal of the campaign has been to force “low-end” workers out of Beijing, adding that many migrants unknowingl­y stay and work in unsafe conditions.

Caibang, a company that supplies vegetables for restaurant­s and hotels in Beijing, posted a notice on social media on Saturday saying it will offer free moving services to those forced to move during the campaign.

“We have helped about 60 people move with our trucks so far,” said Li Chunmei, an employee at Caibang. “Our boss is a migrant worker, so he understand­s their plight.”

Niu Xingwei, 25, who left his home in Jilin province to work at a human resources agency about five years ago sought help from Caibang to relocate on Saturday.

“I received a notice on Tuesday saying I had to leave my old apartment in Yizhuang by Sunday because it didn’t meet health and safety standards. I know it is because of the fire in Daxing,” Niu said.

“The rent for my new apartment is 3,000 yuan ($454), almost double the rent for my old one,” said Niu. “But there is more opportunit­y in Beijing, so I still want to give it a shot.”

Experts suggested that the city needs to draft regulation­s and strictly follow them to prevent disasters such as the Xinjian fire.

Although multipurpo­se warehouses are not safe, they exist because of high demand, Liu Tiemin, a researcher at the China Academy of Safety Sciences and Technology, told China Central Television on Saturday. Perhaps the city government can create safe spaces in warehouses, Liu said.

Our boss is a migrant worker, so he understand­s their plight.” Li Chunmei, employee at Caibang, a company that is helping displaced residents

 ?? ZOU HONG / CHINA DAILY ?? A firefighte­r checks the site of last week’s fire that killed 19 people and injured eight others in Xinjian village, Beijing’s Daxing district, on Sunday.
ZOU HONG / CHINA DAILY A firefighte­r checks the site of last week’s fire that killed 19 people and injured eight others in Xinjian village, Beijing’s Daxing district, on Sunday.

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