A chemical factory blast injured at least two workers in Harbin,
capital of northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, on Thursday afternoon,
testing the nerves of local people once again.
The accident took place at about 3:30 PM, when three of nine
chemical tanks in the factory's yard caught fire and two others
exploded on the northern bank of the Songhua River, the local
Life Daily reported on Friday without identifying the
factory.
It took firefighters about 5 hours to contain the blaze, it
said. However, factory management officials all fled after the
blast.
"If all the tanks exploded, space within 500 square meters of
the factory would have been leveled and destroyed completely," Fang
Jun, a fire control officer on the spot, was quoted as saying.
"All the injured people have been hospitalized, and
investigations of the blast are under way," an official with the
city's work safety committee, who declined to be identified, said
on Friday.
Wang Xiaodong, 38, one of the victims whose face was seriously
burnt, has been in a coma since Thursday, said Yang Xinbo, a doctor
at the Harbin No 5 Hospital, where the injured were receiving
medical treatment.
The chemicals in the tanks were marked as "low-rate toxins,"
said the paper, without identifying them by name.
Air samples from the blast site have been collected and sent to
a provincial environmental examination station for further testing,
an official with the Harbin environmental protection bureau told
China Daily on Friday.
The newspaper did not say if any chemicals flowed into the
Songhua River, which is the only water supply for Harbin.
The river was polluted last November when about 100 tons of
toxic benzene spilled after a petrochemical plant explosion in
neighboring Jilin Province.
(China Daily April 8, 2006)