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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Chemical plant blast kills 14 in China
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Nov 19, 2011


Fourteen workers were killed and five injured Saturday in an explosion at a chemical plant in east China, state media reported, citing local authorities.

The explosion occurred around 2pm at a melamine production facility in Xintai, in Shandong province, Xinhua news agency reported.

Workers were maintaining and repairing a condenser when the blast occurred, Xinhau said, citing a statement by the Xintai city government.

Four workers died immediately and a further 10 died in hospital. The five injured were in a stable condition and an investigation into the cause of the accident was under way, Xinhua said.

China has a notoriously poor workplace safety record blamed on widespread disregard for basic safety measures as companies chase profits.

In September, three people were killed in an explosion at a privately-owned chemical plant in east China's Jiangxi province.

Among other recent deadly industrial accidents, last week at least 34 miners were killed in a blast at coal mine in the southwestern province of Yunnan.

In October, 12 workers building an underground parking lot in northeast China were killed when a concrete ceiling collapsed on them. Days earlier another dozen workers died at a steel plant in the eastern city of Nanjing when molten iron spilled from a furnace.

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Fukushima 'not obstacle' to Japan business: PM
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Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda said Friday that the Fukushima nuclear disaster was no longer "an obstacle" to business in Japan. The March 11 earthquake and tsunami, which triggered the world's worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl 25 years ago, left 20,000 people dead and missing and was a huge blow to the world's third-biggest economy. Speaking on the Indonesian island of Bali ... read more


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