Blast at Chinese chemical plant kills 19
An explosion at a chemical plant in southwest China left 19 dead and injured another 12, authorities said today, the latest industrial accident in a country where lax regulations often lead to tragedy.
The blast occurred at 6:30pm Thursday night at an industrial park in Sichuan province's Yibin city, according to a statement on the website of the local work safety administration.
Blast in a Chinese chemical plant yesterday#safetyfirsthttps://t.co/2jGFSHbXCh pic.twitter.com/9xkWICRrWU
— Responsabilitas (@Responsabilitas) July 13, 2018
The injured had been taken to hospital and were in stable condition, county officials said, adding that the resulting fire had been put out.
Photos on a local news site showed what appeared to be the burned out shell of a building surrounded by rubble.
The company that owns the building where the fire occurred is a chemical manufacturer named Hengda, according to the official Xinhua news service.
China has been rocked by several industrial accidents in recent years.
A septic tank explosion last November destroyed a wide swathe of a light industrial area in Ningbo, just south of Shanghai.
In 2015, giant chemical blasts in a container storage facility killed at least 165 people in the northern port city of Tianjin.
The explosions caused more than $1 billion in damage and sparked widespread anger at a perceived lack of transparency over the accident's causes and its environmental impact.
A government inquiry eventually recommended 123 people be punished. Tianjin's mayor at the time of the accident was sentenced to 12 years in prison for graft in September.
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