Two victims of the mustard-gas leak in Qiqihar, Northeast
China's Heilong-jiang Province, were in critical condition in a
local hospital last night.
Another 33 people were also in hospital receiving treatment.
Poison victims Li Guizhen, 31, and Wang Cheng, 22, were in a
serious condition, according to sources with the People's
Liberation Army Hospital No 203.
Li, a waste collector from Central China's Henan Province, and
Wang from Qiqihar were poisoned on Monday last week while they were
transporting barrels containing the poisonous gas from the Beijiang
Gardens residential area to a local recycling facility.
A doctor at the hospital, who refused to be named, told China
Daily that, by 3 pm yesterday, 31 men and four women had been
admitted to the hospital but declined to say how many of them were
in a serious condition.
The hospital has appealed to Chinese pharmaceutical plants to
help tide it over a shortage of medicines to counter infection and
drugs for improving immunity.
The hospital has also set up 28 extra beds to accommodate the
victims, according to Xinhua News Agency.
Experts have confirmed that the five metal barrels of mustard
gas found in Qiqihar were chemical weapons left by Japanese troops
during their invasion of China between 1937 and 1945.
The barrels were discovered at a construction site and one of
them was broken by workers at the site, causing an oil-like
substance to leak out into the soil.
Yesterday, visiting Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing told his
Japanese counterpart Yoriko Kawaguchi that the accident in Qiqihar
has caused serious casualties to the Chinese.
He urged the Japanese side to attach high importance to the
accident and shoulder up the responsibility.
Kawaguchi promised that her government will earnestly co-operate
with the Chinese side to properly handle the aftermath of the
accident.
Local anti-chemical warfare soldiers have disinfected all 11
polluted sites and sealed all the contaminated soil and transported
it to a warehouse along with the barrels.
The city lifted a quarantine on the 11 polluted sites yesterday
morning.
(China Daily August 12, 2003)