Los Angeles Times

17 hurt as van rams crowd in China

- By Jessica Meyers

SHANGHAI — A burning minivan careened into pedestrian­s on a sidewalk in downtown Shanghai on Friday, injuring 17 people, local police said.

The crash, which left the driver with injuries, occurred at 9 a.m. outside a Starbucks near People’s Park, a popular green area in the center of the city. All of those hit were taken to the hospital, including three who were seriously injured.

Authoritie­s suspect the driver, identified only by his surname, Chen, was illegally transporti­ng hazardous materials and lighted the van on fire by smoking while driving. Chen, 40, works at a Shanghai metal products firm and has no criminal record.

A witness told the Paper, a local news outlet, that the van held several gas tanks. The fire was quickly extinguish­ed, and the canisters did not appear to explode.

Videos posted online show firefighte­rs extinguish­ing flames pouring from a gray van blackened by the fire. People lay unconsciou­s on the ground.

An eyewitness who goes by the surname Qian told the Paper that people tried to break the van’s window to reach the driver. “Maybe the driver passed out,” the witness said.

Shanghai police are continuing to investigat­e.

China has dealt with numerous situations in recent years in which citizens have used vehicles as weapons. Attackers last year drove a car into a government building and set off explosives in the volatile western region of Xinjiang. More than 30 people died in 2014 when two cars plowed into shoppers at a busy market, also in Xinjiang. In 2013, five people died and 40 were injured when a vehicle slammed into a crowd and caught fire near Beijing’s Forbidden City.

That incident occurred four months after a driver plowed into a crowd in Barcelona, Spain, killing 13, one of many vehicular attacks in Europe in recent years.

Friday’s crash occurred as British Prime Minister Theresa May prepared to speak in Shanghai.

Meyers is a special correspond­ent. Nicole Liu, Kemeng Fan and Gaochao Zhang in The Times’ Beijing bureau contribute­d to this report.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States