An unsafe bridge has now been added to the list of causes for a
bus accident that has so far claimed 26 lives in Chongqing.
The guardrails on each side of the bridge were only ten
centimeters in height, far lower than the minimum height of 46
centimeters required by law, Li Yizhong, Minister of the State
Administration of Work Safety (SAWS), said at the scene of the
accident.
"The railings were made of cement but not reinforced by steel
bars," he said. "A combination of poor road quality, overloading,
and lax traffic management are to blame for the worst road accident
in China so far this year," he said.
Local police said the bus should not have been carrying more
than 25 passengers, adding that overnight rain may have caused the
road to become slippery and contributed to the accident.
The accident happened around 8:10 AM on Monday when a bus
carrying 32 passengers ploughed through a guardrail of the
Changsheng bridge that spans a narrow gully. It was traveling on a
road that runs parallel to the Jialing River on its way from
downtown Yubei District to Beibei, in the suburbs of Chongqing.
The bus plunged 13 meters killing 22 passengers at the
scene.
Two others died on the way to the hospital. Eight people were
rushed to the hospital where six, including the bus driver, are
being treated for serious injuries.
Most victims are residents from the two districts and police are
still trying identify all of the deceased.
Half of the railings were destroyed by the accident and vehicles
have been diverted to a nearby highway.
Zhou Mubing, vice mayor of Chongqing and head of the rescue
team, said the Beibei District has organized 32 teams to meet
victims and their families, console them, and start sorting out
compensation issues.
Government leaders, including Zhou Mubing, are overseeing the
rescue operation and handling the aftermath of the accident.
The bus belonged to the city's state-owned Yuyun Company.
Statistics show the company is registered with assets of 610
million yuan (US$79 million) and employs more than 2,300 staff. It
owns about 1,350 buses and trucks and operates about 390
routes.
Statistics from the Chongqing municipal government show 253
people died in 202 road accidents in the first quarter of this
year. Of the major accidents, 62.5 percent were caused by
overloading, which was blamed for about 62 percent of the total
fatalities.
Last October, a bus fell off the elevated on-ramp of a Chongqing
bridge killing 30 people and injuring 20.
On January 1, overloading caused a road accident that killed
nine people and injured 35.
Just ten days ago, five people were killed and 36 were injured
in a 52-vehicle pile-up in Chongqing. The vehicles carried 1,000
tons more than their limits, and some of them carried five times
their stipulated weight limits.
(Xinhua News Agency April 24, 2007)