ARDUOUS TASK
... Excavators are seen during rescue operations yesterday at an industrial estate hit by a landslide three days ago in Shenzhen, Guangdong province. The landslide is the latest in a series of fatal accidents in China and comes just months after a massive chemical blast in the industrial city of Tianjin killed almost 200 people.
BEIJING: Rescuers scrabbling through the debris of a huge three-day-old landslide yesterday discovered a young man alive in the mud, as China’s cabinet announced a probe into the nation’s latest industrial accident.
Tian Zeming survived for almost 72 hours on seeds and fruit that had been buried alongside him when a tide of earth and rubble crushed buildings, rescuers were reported as saying.
“He has a very strong will to survive,” the emergency team’s leader told the government-run Shenzhen Special Zone Daily newspaper in the southern Chinese boom town.
The 19-year-old had used a rock to tap on debris in a bid to attract the attention of those looking for signs of life among the mud.
Images from the scene showed dozens of firefighters and police thronging around a stretcher, apparently bearing the teenager to a waiting ambulance.
He was confirmed to be one of the 76 listed as officially missing after the disaster, the Guangdong province fire department said on its official microblog.
A second man who was also found alive in the debris early yesterday died several hours later, firefighters said.
The number of confirmed deaths remained low, but was expected to rise as the so-called “golden period” – the 72-hour window when survival chances are highest – closed.
The landslide is the latest in a series of fatal accidents in China, and comes just months after a massive chemical blast in the industrial city of Tianjin killed almost 200 people.
Anger was growing over the lax standards and poor enforcement that were seen to be behind the disaster.
“The lack of safety supervision and passive attitude in taking precautions has caused the whole nation to shake with anger and shocked the world!” user Xizidan wrote in a post that was taken down by authorities, but found on the censorship tracking website Weiboscope.
The mudslide was caused by the improper storage of waste from construction sites, according to the official newspaper of the ministry of land and resources.
The State Council, China’s cabinet, has set up a team to investigate the disaster, state broadcaster CCTV said yesterday.
The team will be headed by the minister of land resources.