IEyeNews

iLocal News Archives

China explosions: Chemical specialists sent to Tianjin

_84866855_09dcf315-79fb-4886-8179-545e76310f4b _84866857_cabc7c11-da27-4a6b-91f8-7faeabff79eb _84867162_china_blast_624_v7 _84871682_b3343670-3def-489b-93ef-8ed78df4ecf9 _84871684_efdb2283-deb4-4850-845e-852441c10abf _84872321_b97df2ab-90e0-43e6-bb96-3b8a326b4c18 _84872329_6faa1528-c3cf-48f0-8e30-03b61269a279 _84876226_6a727841-d4af-4178-9cf0-a86029360996 _84876228_d72a96a5-2393-492d-866c-6db8363d2683 _84876967_84876232From BBC

China has sent a team of military chemical experts to the northern city of Tianjin, after explosions left at least 50 dead, state media report.

The blasts, late on Wednesday night, ripped through an industrial port area, destroying buildings, shipping containers and thousands of new cars.

It is not known what caused the blasts, nor whether chemicals have leaked.

More than 3,500 residents are spending the night in temporary shelters. Hundreds are injured, 71 critically.

State news agency Xinhua reports that rescue workers are “racing against the clock to save the injured and contain fires”, 24 hours after the massive blasts at a warehouse in the Binhai New Area.

Many of the wounded had glass or shrapnel cuts, skull injuries or fractures, Wang Siaojie of Teda Hospital said.

More than 200 experts in chemical materials from the Chinese army have arrived in Tianjin. Their first task was to test the air for toxic gases, Xinhua said.

Rescue teams were ordered to wear protective clothing, it added.

The warehouse that exploded is owned by a company called Ruihai Logistics, which handles toxic chemicals including sodium cyanide and toluene diisocyanate, according to reports.

The People’s Daily, the official newspaper of the Chinese Communist Party, reports that rescuers “are trying to remove all the 700 tons of sodium cyanide” stored at the site. Hydrogen peroxide had been prepared to detoxify the chemical, the paper says.

A damaged police car is seen at the site of the massive explosions in Tianjin (13 August 2015)

Around 1,000 firefighters were at the site on Thursday

Firemen work among several destroyed buildings and containers after a huge explosion rocked the port city of Tianjin, China, 13 August 2015

Buildings and containers were destroyed

The Tianjin Port Group Company said dozens of its employees were unaccounted for, according to Xinhua.

Firefighters were already at the scene when the explosions took place.

They had been called to reports of a container fire, state media said. At least 17 firefighters are among the dead.

Firefighters in protective gear watch partially pink smoke continue to billow after an explosion at a warehouse in Tianjin (13 August 2015)

Firefighters at the scene were clad in protective gear

An aerial picture of smoke rising at the site of the explosions is seen at the Binhai new district, Tianjin (13 August 2015)

An aerial image showed the number of new cars destroyed

_84876230_20cbd360-4e4c-4690-901c-f37803f462e6An injured woman receives treatment at a hospital after the explosions at the Binhai new district in Tianjin, China, August 13, 2015

At least 700 people have been injured in the explosions

The two successive explosions, at 23:30 local time on Wednesday (15:30 GMT), caused a fireball visible from space and a blast wind that broke windows several kilometres away.

A large area of the port was devastated. Shipping containers were left buckled, bent and toppled on to each other like toy bricks.

Row upon row of new cars were reduced to blackened husks.

Almost 10,000 vehicles were ruined, according to Chinese media, with Renaults and Volkswagens the worst affected.

The head of Tianjin’s environmental protection bureau, Wen Wurui, said pollution levels were being monitored.

“It would be harmful if you breathe in [this toxic air] for a long time,” he said.

“But at present, it has not exceeded [the standard] too much based on our monitoring.”

Water discharge points to the sea had been closed, he said.

A man who was working as a security guard in a nearby factory told the BBC that he saw there was a fire, but did not expect explosions.

“Suddenly I heard a bang,” he said. “I lay down immediately, but I still got injured.

“My security booth was destroyed completely.”

Another injured man said after the explosion his mind went blank.

“My first reaction was to run,” he said. “I heard another burst. I was running away. I got blood all over my body.”

 

The blast ripped apart a nearby dormitory for migrant workers, who were forced to flee the collapsing building.

“I rolled off the bed after the first shockwave hit, so I scrambled to run for my life,” said resident Dan Agio.

“When I reached downstairs, the second blast happened. It’s as if the sky collapsed. In a blink of an eye, the roof fell.”

Explosions survivor “The second blast blew me away”

The editor of the BBC’s Chinese Service, Raymond Li, points out that 24 hours after the explosions, the cause still is not known.

Just a few days ago, city officials visited the industrial site to discuss safety standards, he says.

It is also becoming clear that the hazardous chemicals were stored closer to residential areas than they are legally allowed to be, he says.

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang has promised “open and transparent information disclosure” on the investigation.

The People’s Daily reported that officials had said the cause of the explosion would be figured out once the fire at the scene had been completely extinguished.

IMAGES:

Rescuers in Tianjin (13 August 2015)

Paramilitary police were among those working on the clear-up

An injured firefighter grimaces as he is examined in a hospital following explosions in Tianjin municipality, Aug. 13, 2015

Firefighters are among the dead and injured

A damaged fire truck is seen at the site of the massive explosions in Tianjin on August 13, 2015.

There are questions about the storage of chemicals at the site

An injured man rests in the dining hall of a primary school, which has been turned into a shelter for people living nearby, Tianjin (13 August 2015)

A primary school is being used as a temporary shelter for local residents

Tianjin explosions

What we know about explosions: Much of what happened is unclear, but here is what we do know

Tianjin in profile: More about Tianjin, one of the busiest ports in the world

‘Seismic scale’ of blasts: The explosions were so large they registered on seismometers

Blast ‘like end of the world’: Residents’ stories

Pictures reveal devastation: The latest images from Tianjin

‘Netizens’ critical of coverage silenced: Authorities remove posts from social media

Nasa satellite image showing dark plume over Bohai sea (13 August 2015)

Nasa has released this image from its Terra satellite showing a dark plume of smoke drifting over the Bohai Sea, east of Tianjin (at left of picture)

For more on this story and video go to: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-33915683

 

LEAVE A RESPONSE

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *