Bridge collapse in China

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coldmm803
Posts: 1022
Joined: Fri Sep 30, 2005 10:22 am

Bridge collapse in China

Post by coldmm803 »

BEIJING - A bridge under construction in an ancient Chinese city collapsed as workers removed scaffolding from its facade, killing at least 29 people, the government said Tuesday. The 140-foot-high bridge spanning the Tuo River in the central Hunan city of Fenghuang collapsed Monday, the Hunan Administration of Work Safety said in a statement posted to the official Gov.cn Web site. The span in Hunan's Fenghuang county, intended for both pedestrian and vehicle traffic, had four decorative stone arches and was scheduled to open at the end of the month, the administration said.Rescuers managed to save 86 people, including 22 who were injured, many from the 123 workers on the site at the time of the collapse, the government's Xinhua News Agency reported. The death toll rose steadily as rescuers with trained dogs and bulldozers sifted through toppled concrete.Premier Wen Jiabao ordered a thorough investigation into the collapse of the 880-foot bridge, China Central Television reported.The accident came less than two weeks after the collapse of a bridge in Minnesota that drew attention to aging transport infrastructure in the United States.Surrounded by lush mountains and rice paddies, the ancient city of Fenghuang is a well-known tourist spot and home to the Miao and Tujia ethnic minorities. It is also famed for traditional stilt houses lining the Tuo River.China Central Television showed bulldozers plowing through the rubble, overturning chunks of stone and concrete mixed in a tangle of steel reinforcement bars. News photos showed anxious and weeping villagers waiting for news about their loved ones.Most of the people working on the bridge were local farmers, the agency said."I was riding a bike with my husband and we had just passed under the bridge and were about 50 meters (160 feet) away when it collapsed," said a witness who would only gave her surname, Wu. "There was a huge amount of dust that came up and didn't clear for about 10 minutes."Yang Long, a villager whose home was just a dozen yards from the site, described a grim rescue effort. "Their arms and legs were broken, only linked with skin," he said of bodies being pulled from the rubble.Wu, a cleaning lady at a local hotel, said there were houses underneath the bridge and she had heard that friends who lived there had died.The safety administration said the bridge was designed by the Hunan Huagang Transportation Design Institute in the provincial capital of Changsha.Xinhua said the bridge was a $1.6 million project by the Fengda company of western Hunan, without giving the company's full name. An employee of a Fengda Road Construction Co. in Fenghuang said he was not clear if the bridge project was his company's. He refused to give his name.Xinhua identified the contractor as the state-owned Hunan Road and Bridge Construction (Group) Ltd. Co., or RBC. RBC's construction manager and project supervisor were detained for questioning, it said. Phone numbers listed on the company's Web site rang unanswered Tuesday.Construction accidents in China are frequent, with contractors often opting for shoddy materials to cut costs and using migrant laborers with little or no safety training.The Fenghuang collapse is among the worst in recent memory. On June 15, a bridge in south China's Guangdong province collapsed when a cargo vessel loaded with sand rammed into it, killing nine people. That bridge was built in 1988 and spanned the Xijiang River, a major tributary of the Pearl River.In January 1999 a pedestrian bridge spanning the Qi River in southwestern China's Sichuan province collapsed three years after it was built. Forty people died and another 14 were injured.Following the accident, a local county deputy party secretary was sentenced to death for accepting a bribe from a childhood friend in exchange for the bridge-building contract. The accident highlighted concerns among Chinese leaders and the general public about breakneck development and pervasive corruption among officials. In its annual report on road safety last year, the Ministry of Communications categorized 6,300 of the country's bridges as dangerous because of serious damage to their "structural components," the China Daily newspaper reported Tuesday. The newspaper report quoted Xiao Rucheng, secretary general of China's Institute of Bridge and Structural Engineering, as saying that China should "learn a lesson from the Mississippi bridge and accelerate the inspection of unsafe bridges," referring to the Aug. 1 collapse of the bridge in Minnesota that killed at least nine people. The China Daily also ran an editorial Tuesday saying rising traffic levels made the need for nationwide bridge repairs and upgrades an urgent issue. "If left unrepaired these bridges may crumble at any time, (wreaking) economic havoc and possibly claiming human lives," it said, without mentioning the Fenghuang disaster, which was not reported by state media until late Monday.link http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/200...s0NUE
drunkenmaxx
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Joined: Mon Jul 21, 2003 6:19 am

Post by drunkenmaxx »

a $1.6 million bridge? kind of cheap.
chew aura pizza cheat main"the world in my hands, there's noone left to hear you scream, noone's there for you"
KNINE
Posts: 2320
Joined: Mon Aug 21, 2006 4:52 am
Location: Suffolk, Va.

Post by KNINE »

Construction accidents in China are frequent, with contractors often opting for shoddy materials to cut costs and using migrant laborers with little or no safety training.Who migrates to China? I thought people were trying to get out of that country.
"Don't look to the government to solve your problems, the government is the problem." Ronald Reagan"They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." Ben Franklin.
KNINE
Posts: 2320
Joined: Mon Aug 21, 2006 4:52 am
Location: Suffolk, Va.

Post by KNINE »

The newspaper report quoted Xiao Rucheng, secretary general of China's Institute of Bridge and Structural Engineering, as saying that China should "learn a lesson from the Mississippi bridge and accelerate the inspection of unsafe bridges," referring to the Aug. 1 collapse of the bridge in Minnesota that killed at least nine people. The Chinese should blame it on the Bush tax cuts. That's what we're doing here.
"Don't look to the government to solve your problems, the government is the problem." Ronald Reagan"They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." Ben Franklin.
Atomb
Posts: 1236
Joined: Mon May 17, 2004 1:17 am

Post by Atomb »

I just read an article which mentions the growing number of workers migrating from Africa to China for jobs. Seems like that's the place to go for jobs these days!btw...when i was in china for work 3 years ago...there was an explosion in the plant that killed 6 people and production continued the next day (except for the equipment that was damaged). When safety equipment in a steel mill consists of converse canvas high tops and a plastic hard hat....hmmm
I have signatures turned off so I'm not even sure what mine says in this space!
Raven
Posts: 2922
Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2003 10:58 am
Location: Lac Ste. Marie, Quebec

Re: (Atomb)

Post by Raven »

Lives are cheap when you are just beginning to feel the exhilarating high of capitalism.
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