Police have arrested two people in connection with a chemical
warehouse fire that forced 16,000 people to evacuate their homes in
southern China's Guangzhou city Wednesday night.
A tenant and a warehouse guard are accused of violating safety
regulations by moving and storing dangerous chemicals in the rain,
and they were arrested by the Tianhe branch of the Municipal Public
Security Bureau of Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong Province.
The chemicals were identified as 35 tons of hydro sulfurous
sodium, and 500 kilograms of potassium permanganate, methyl
methacrylate, and raw materials for detergent, according to the
Guangzhou Municipal Bureau of Work Safety.
The investigation showed a company called Rui Xing Tai unloaded
35 tons of hydrosulfurous sodium to the warehouse in Daguan Road in
Tianhe District, at about 4:00 p.m. on Wednesday when it was
raining.
The hydrosulfurous sodium self-ignited when the rain made it
damp, and one third of the chemical was destroyed in the fire,
which was extinguished at midnight.
The bureau is investigating Rui Xing Tai and said the company
could face prosecution.
About 10,000 college students were among the 16,000 forced to
evacuate their residences on the evening. They were allowed to
return Thursday morning, after environmental protection authorities
declared that the air quality had returned to normal.
(Xinhua News Agency May 13, 2006)