Fourteen
people were injured in an explosion at a controversial chemical plant in the
eastern Chinese city of Zhangzhou, authorities said Tuesday, the second
accident at the site in two years.
Footage
from an amateur video posted by China's CCTV News showed flames billowing into
the air following the explosion at the plant producing paraxylene -- a chemical
commonly known as PX and used to make fabric in Fujian province.
The
blast occurred on Monday evening and the 14 injured -- including four
firefighters -- were being treated in hospital, a notice on the provincial
government website said, citing provincial authorities.
It
added that the fire was still not under control as of Tuesday morning.
It
is the second accident in 20 months to occur at the facility, the state-run
Xinhua news agency reported. Some 430 firefighters were battling the blaze, it
said, adding that witnesses reported feeling a tremor as far as 50 kilometres
(30 miles) away.
Proposals
for plants producing PX, a flammable, carcinogenic liquid used in the
production of polyester films and fabrics, have sparked large protests in
several Chinese cities in recent years over perceived health risks.
A
major fire engulfs a paraxylene chemical plant after an explosion in Zhangzhou,
southeast China on April 6, 2015
|
The
Zhangzhou PX plant was originally slated to be built in the nearby coastal city
of Xiamen, but was moved to its present site after thousands took part in a
protest in 2007.
In
March last year thousands of demonstrators also took to the streets of Maoming,
in the southern province of Guangdong, for days of demonstrations against
another PX plant.
The
rallies underscored the increasing number of angry protests over environmental
concerns in the country, where three decades of rapid and unfettered industrial
expansion have taken a heavy toll.
China's
environmental minister in March said that construction of PX projects must be
"scientifically decided and must pass environmental impact
assessment", Xinhua reported Monday.
In
a sign of the ruling Communist Party's sensitivity to the debate over
environmental issues, comments had been disabled on a report on the Zhangzhou
incident on the Netease web portal as of Tuesday morning.
Yet
discussion of the explosion dominated China's popular online social networks,
with many users citing the incident as vindication of environmental protesters'
fears.
"Do
you remember what we were worried about at the time?" wrote a user on Sina
Weibo, a Chinese Twitter equivalent, referring to similar protests in the
northeastern city of Dalian in 2011. "What we worried about is now the
reality in Zhangzhou."
One
user wrote: "Only when the city officials and their families live near a
PX plant will their assurances be convincing."
Another opined: "They
should build a PX plant in Beijing."
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