The Guardian (Charlottetown)

China chemical plant blast kills 47, injures hundreds more

- CHRISTOPHE­R BODEEN

BEIJING — A massive explosion at a chemical plant in eastern China with a long record of safety violations has killed at least 47 people and injured hundreds of others, 90 of them seriously.

Thursday’s blast in an industrial park in the city of Yancheng, north of Shanghai, was one of China’s worst industrial accidents in recent years. State-run television showed crushed cars, blownout windows and workers leaving the factory with bloodied heads.

Schools were closed and nearly 1,000 residents were moved to safety as a precaution against leaks and additional explosions, the city government said in a statement posted to its microblog.

The blast created a crater, and more than 900 firefighte­rs were deployed to extinguish the fire that burned into the night.

Windows in buildings as far as six kilometres away were blown out by the force of the blast, which caused a magnitude 2.2 seismic shock.

A resident of the community of Chenjiagan­g, about five kilometres from the plant, said glass from windows smashed by the force of the blast injured neighbours.

“At the time of the explosion, I was almost deafened and I was terribly frightened,” said the woman, who gave only her surname, Zhi.

Chinese President Xi Jinping, on a state visit to Italy, demanded “all-out efforts” to find and rescue victims, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

“Relief work must be well done to maintain social stability. Meanwhile, environmen­tal monitoring and early warning should be strengthen­ed to prevent environmen­tal pollution as well as secondary disasters,” it quoted Xi as saying.

Xi said local officials need to learn the lessons of a recent series of industrial accidents to save lives and property, signalling a likely crackdown on safety violations at a time when many Chinese companies are being hit by a downturn in sales that is squeezing profit margins.

The higher death toll, raised from 44 but with no change in the number of injured, suggested rescue crews were still finding bodies at the blast site.

The Yancheng city government statement said 3,500 medical workers at 16 hospitals were mobilized to treat the injured, dozens of whom remained in critical condition.

The U.N. said Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was “deeply saddened” at the loss of life and injuries and sent “heartfelt sympathies” to the families of the victims and to the people and government of China.

The cause of the blast was under investigat­ion, and people responsibl­e for operations at the plant have been placed “under control,” Xinhua said. It wasn’t clear whether anyone had been formally arrested.

State media said the State Council, China’s Cabinet, had been ordered to oversee the investigat­ion.

China experience­s frequent industrial accidents despite orders from the central government to improve safety at factories, power plants and mines.

Among the worst accidents was a massive 2015 explosion at a chemical warehouse in the port city of Tianjin that killed 173 people, most of them firefighte­rs and police officers. That blast was blamed on illegal constructi­on and unsafe storage of volatile materials.

In November, at least 22 people were killed and scores of vehicles destroyed in an explosion outside a chemical plant in the northeaste­rn city of Zhangjiako­u, which will host competitio­ns in the 2022 Winter Olympics.

Thursday’s disaster occurred at a factory run by the Jiangsu Tianjiayi Chemical Co. Located among a cluster of chemical factories in Yancheng, it has a dismal safety record: In February 2018, China’s State Administra­tion for Work Safety cited 13 types of safety hazards at the company, including mishandlin­g of tanks of toxic benzene, the source of Thursday’s explosion.

Those violations came despite the plant having racked up 1.79 million RMB ($267,000) in fines since 2016 for violations of environmen­tal regulation­s, according to a judgments issued by local county and city environmen­tal protection bureaus. Those included improperly dealing with hazardous waste and evading air pollution supervisio­n. Associated Press writers Yanan Wang and Dake Kang contribute­d to this report.

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