A Chinese shipowner was arrested on Friday following a spill of
sulphuric acid which forced more than 1,500 residents to evacuate and
killed fish by the thousands, state media said on Friday. Xu Changjun,
41, would face unspecified criminal charges for the spill in August on
the Grand Canal, a 900-year-old waterway in east China, Xinhua news
agency said.
The ship ran aground in the Hangzhou section of the canal in the early
hours of Aug. 3. All 220 tons of concentrated sulphuric acid aboard
leaked into the river.
"The leakage forced over 1,500 residents of Tangxi and Renhe towns to
flee their homes because of the dangerous fumes given off by the acid,"
Xinhua said. "Fish died by the thousands in the polluted section of the
canal, and navigation was suspended for 10 hours."
China has suffered a series of industrial accidents that have
contaminated rivers, the most serious of which happened last November
when a blast at a petrochemical plant sent toxic benzene compounds into
the Songhua River, a source of drinking water for millions.
In June, a truck carrying coal tar overturned, dumping the load into the
Dasha River in the northern province of Shanxi and contaminating water
supplies for 50,000 people.
(
Planet Ark, 20/11/2006)