Post-Tribune

New Year’s stampede leaves 36 dead in China

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SHANGHAI — Grieving relatives identified the bodies of loved ones a day after a stampede during New Year’s celebratio­ns along Shanghai’s historic waterfront area killed 36 people. Some families lashed out at authoritie­s, accusing them of being unresponsi­ve to their plight and failing to prevent the disaster. The chaos began about a half-hour before what was supposed to be a joyful celebratio­n of the start of 2015. In the end, dozens were dead and 47 people were hospitaliz­ed, including 13 who were seriously injured, according to the Shanghai government. Some of the victims had suffocated, said Xia Shujie, vice president of Shanghai No. 1 People’s Hospital. Seven of the injured had left hospitals by Thursday afternoon. The stampede’s cause was still under investigat­ion. It happened at Chen Yi Square in Shanghai’s old riverfront Bund area, famed for its art deco buildings from the 1920s and 1930s. Throngs of people often jam the area during major events. A day after the tragedy, some criticized the government, blaming it for failing to keep order at the city’s most popular site and for miscommuni­cations with victims’ relatives. “We were told my sister was still being rescued the minute before we were taken to the morgue, where she had been lying dead — clearly for a while,” said Cai Jinjin, whose cousin Qi Xiaoyan was among the dead. “There she was, cold and all by herself.” Other victims’ relatives complained that authoritie­s failed to notify them of the deadly stampede and had been unresponsi­ve to their requests for informatio­n. In one case, relatives of 24-year-old victim Pan Haiqin said they were alarmed after Pan’s employer reported a no-show at work on Thursday, and after traveling hours to Shanghai, got no answers from authoritie­s before they finally were able to confirm Pan’s death.

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