San Diego Union-Tribune

INDIA CHEMICAL LEAK KILLS 11, SICKENS 1,000

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A gas leak at a chemical factory owned by a South Korean company in southern India early Thursday left at least 11 people dead and about 1,000 struggling to breathe.

The chemical styrene, used to make plastic and rubber, leaked from the LG Polymers plant in the city of Vishakhapa­tnam in Andhra Pradesh state while workers were preparing to restart the facility after a coronaviru­s lockdown was eased, officials said.

Videos and photos from the area showed dozens of people, including women and children, lying unconsciou­s in the streets, arms open wide with white froth trailing from their mouths. The scene evoked bitter memories of a major industrial disaster in 1984 that left at least 4,000 people dead and 500,000 injured, according to government figures, when methyl isocyanate leaked from a Union Carbide India pesticide plant in Bhopal in central India.

Hundreds of people fled from Thursday’s gas leak, some on motorbikes and others carried in open trucks. Some who couldn’t find vehicles raced away barefooted, many with small children slung across their shoulders.

Police officers, some wearing gas masks, rushed from house to house and evacuated about 3,000 people. Struggling to breathe, many people lay on the road as passersby helped them with water.

“No one could breathe. I couldn’t see anything for some time,” Vijay Raju, a local resident, said by phone. “For a moment, I thought I would die.”

The leak was suspected to have come from large tanks left unattended because of the strict coronaviru­s lockdown over the past six weeks. The lockdown was eased on Monday, allowing neighborho­od shops and factories to resume activities.

“Our initial informatio­n is that workers were checking a gas storage tank when it started leaking,” said Industries Minister M. Goutham Reddy.

 ?? AP ?? A woman sickened by a chemical gas leak in Vishakhapa­tnam, India, is carried to medical care on Thursday. Chemical gas leaked from an industrial plant in the southern city, leaving people struggling to breathe and collapsing in the streets as they tried to flee.
AP A woman sickened by a chemical gas leak in Vishakhapa­tnam, India, is carried to medical care on Thursday. Chemical gas leaked from an industrial plant in the southern city, leaving people struggling to breathe and collapsing in the streets as they tried to flee.

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