The Hunan Provincial Government said Thursday that
it will severely punish the officials responsible for the arsenide
pollution that led to water supply shortage for 80,000 residents
for four days in the province.
They will be punished in accordance with relevant regulations
for negligence and malpractice, said a leading official in charge
of the provincial joint investigation team.
Earlier Thursday, the State Environmental Protection
Administration (SEPA) made a similar statement.
The joint investigation team for the arsenide pollution,
including the officials from the provincial supervision and
environmental departments, was set up Wednesday.
"We have listened reports on the incident made by the government
of Linxiang City, where the pollution happened, this morning. We
will evaluate the losses and made suggestion on how to deal with
the people responsible after the investigation ends," said the
official, who refused to give his name.
Pan Yue, deputy director of the State Environmental Protection
Administration (SEPA), said the arsenide pollution incident was
caused by negligence and malpractice by the local governments and
environmental departments, which severely harmed the health of the
people
"They ignored people's health in favor of economic growth and
protected the enterprises. Those officials responsible should be
severely punished," he said.
The pollution was uncovered on September 8, when workers from
the local environmental monitoring center conducted routine testing
of water quality in the Xinqiang River of Yueyang County and found
the content of arsenide was ten times higher than normal
standards.
Two chemical plants less than 20 km from the polluted river were
blamed for illegal discharges of a highly toxic arsenic compound
into the river.
Further investigations found not only the river water, but also
the silt on the river bed, contained excessive amounts of arsenide,
indicating the pollution has been continuing for a long time.
The factories have been shut down and police have detained Yao
Zhaohui and Liu Chengping, two managers of the factories in
Linxiang city
They could face criminal charges and prosecution, said Pan.
No casualties have been reported from the arsenide pollution and
the waster supply for Yueyang County was resumed on Tuesday.
(Xinhua News Agency September 15, 2006)