A senior Chinese government official on Thursday called for more
efforts to reduce fatal industrial accidents as reports of deaths
continue to arrive.
Hua Jianmin, State councilor and
secretary-general of the State Council, issued the call at a work
safety meeting he presided over in Beijing.
Industrial safety standards remained poor despite year-on-year
falls of the number of accidents and casualties in the first
quarter of this year, said Hua.
The continual increase in fatal accidents involving coal mines,
dangerous chemical products and transportation had yet to be
curbed, he said.
Hua called on local governments and agencies to give top
priority to industrial safety, and take measures to further detect
and eliminate hidden disasters.
Local governments were urged to continue efforts to resolve the
issues of gas in coal mines, to rectify and close unlicensed or
dangerous mines, while preventing the illegal reopening of mines
that have been closed, including failures to meet safety rules.
Explosions involving coal mines resulted in thousands of deaths
each year, and the government had introduced a broad range of
measures to curb fatal accidents in the coal and other sectors.
On Wednesday, Hua ordered strict monitoring of the polluted
Songhua River as the spring thaw approached.
About 100 tons of benzene compounds were discharged into the
Songhua River after a huge explosion at Jilin Petrochemical Company
on November 13 last year in the worst river pollution incident
since the founding of New China in 1949.
(Xinhua News Agency April 14, 2006)