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China chemical blast toll reaches 78 as inspections ordered by Staff Writers Beijing (AFP) March 25, 2019 The death toll from a chemical plant explosion in China rose to 78 on Monday, as Beijing ordered a nationwide inspection of chemical firms four days after one of the country's worst industrial accidents. Thursday's explosion in Yancheng city, eastern Jiangsu province razed an industrial park and blew out the windows of surrounding homes. The State Council, China's cabinet, told regional authorities around the country to launch a "comprehensive investigation" into companies involved in "nitration manufacturing and storage" in the wake of the blast. They should also conduct risk assessments on chemical industrial parks, it said in an online statement, and identify and fix potential safety hazards in mining, fire, construction and other industries to prevent further accidents. More than 500 people are still in hospital, said city officials in Yancheng on their official Twitter-like Weibo account. Among them, 13 are critically injured and 66 are seriously injured, the statement said. Out of the 28 people who were reported as missing on Saturday, 25 have been found dead and three successfully rescued, said city officials. The city government said some 89 houses were damaged beyond repair and families were resettled after those structures had been demolished. Classes at 10 schools damaged by the blast resumed Monday morning, they added. Local authorities are investigating the cause of the accident and said an unspecified number of people were taken into police custody on Friday. The facility involved in the explosion belonged to Tianjiayi Chemical, a firm with 195 employees established in 2007 that mainly produces raw chemical materials including anisole, a highly flammable compound. Tianjiayi Chemical has a history of violating environmental regulations, according to online records from Yancheng city's environment and ecology bureau. In 2015 and 2017, the firm was fined for violating rules on solid and water waste management. Amid concerns of air and water pollution, the Yancheng city government has said that "pollution indicators are within the normal range" and that drinking water is "not affected". Authorities said Saturday they had also dammed a tributary to the nearby Xinfeng River to prevent any "outflow of sewage from the chemical industrial park."
China probes factory blast as death toll rises to 47 Yancheng, China (AFP) March 22, 2019 Chinese President Xi Jinping ordered local governments Friday to prevent any more industrial disasters after a chemical plant blast left 47 people dead, injured hundreds and flattened an industrial park in the latest such catastrophe to hit the country. Thursday's explosion in the eastern city of Yancheng, Jiangsu province was one of the worst industrial disasters to hit China, with Xi acknowledging that the country has seen a rash of major accidents in recent years. Xi - who is on a state visi ... read more
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