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Gas blowout created 25-sq-km "death zone" ( 2003-12-26 15:34) (chinadaily.com.cn & Agencies)
A gas blowout in southwest China turned an area of 25 square km (10 sq miles) into a death zone, killing at least 191 people as they slept or scrambled to escape, officials said on Friday.
Xinhua News Agency said an operation to cut off the gas planned for 0200 GMT on Friday had been postponed for 24 hours. Eighty-two separate rescue teams scoured surrounding villages for survivors. Dozens of fire trucks and ambulances were standing by. "They have not found any more dead bodies today," a county government official said. Fire was deliberately set up to consume the poison gas. The Chongqing Morning Post quoted one survivor who lived within 100 metres of the well, 41-year-old peasant Liao Yong. He described a hissing black mist of gas which chased him as he fled in his farm vehicle -- with more than 20 relatives and neighbours hanging on. After driving several kilometres, Liao no longer sensed the strange odour of the fumes and stopped his vehicle to look back, the paper said. "But within just minutes, Liao Yong again caught whiff of the smell of stinky duck eggs...and hastily drove on." But at least 191 others were killed. The poisonous gas hovering in the air made an area of 25 sq km a death zone as many villagers were intoxicated by the fumes in their sleep. Bodies by roadside
"Chickens, horses and pigs were also killed." About 41,000 people, most of them farmers, were evacuated from villages within a radius of five km (3.1 miles) from the remote accident site, where the temperature at night drops to freezing. About 740 people were still being treated in hospital while outpatients with ailments such as conjunctivitis and other eye problems numbered nearly 10,000, the official said. Earlier Xinhua report said 291 people were hospitalized, many of them children. When the well erupted, it spewed a high concentration of natural gas and sulphurated hydrogen 30 metres (100 feet) into the air. The fumes spread quickly to nearby areas and caused "mass Sulphurated hydrogen is a toxic gas that can poison or kill people who inhale 760 to 1,000 milligrams per cubic metre. Only after the gas was set ablaze were rescue workers able to enter the area, vice mayor Wu said. Among the dead were 39 children under 10 and 46 people over 60. Two of the dead were well workers, the rest farmers and their families. The well where the blow-out occurred is owned by China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC), parent of oil major PetroChina. Leaders stress rescue
efforts
Chinese leaders, including President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao, called for unreserved efforts in searching and rescuing the victims. The leaders said in their instructions that relevant departments should go all out to rescue victims, prevent poisonous gas from spreading further and reduce casualty. The leaders also called for effective efforts in evacuating local residents to safety and arranging proper accommodation for them. Chongqing's Mayor Wang Hongju was also at the site, visiting the wounded in hospitals and overseeing the relief goods being sent to the homeless. Meanwhile, six other work teams were preparing rescue materials, vehicles and gas-combating equipment for an all-out effort to curb the outflow of gas this morning. The cause of the accident is under investigation.
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