Kaohsiung rocked by underground blasts
By Alison Hsiao /
Staff reporter
Sat, Aug 02, 2014
A series of suspected gas explosions that
shook Greater Kaohsiung from late Thursday night to early yesterday morning
claimed at least 26 lives and injured 269 people.
The blasts tore through the city’s roads
and dug a 100m trench
up to 1.8m deep. At
least 1.5km of
roadways were damaged.
Cars and fire trucks were trapped and
overturned in the rubble. Vehicles were hurled through the air, landing on the
roofs of houses. Flames erupted from manholes after their covers were blasted
off, with gouts of fire reaching 15 stories high.
According to the Greater Kaohsiung
Government, at 8:46pm on Thursday it received reports of manholes spewing white
smoke and the suspected smell of gas near Kaisyuan 3rd Road and Ersheng 1st
Road in Cianjhen District (前鎮). A few hours after the first report, a series of explosions took
place on Yisin Road, Ersheng Road, Sanduo Road and Guanghua Road in the same
district, and in neighboring Lingya District (苓雅).
At press time, city government information
showed that the incident had claimed 26 lives and injured 269. Among the 26
confirmed dead were three firefighters and one volunteer who rushed to the
scene after residents smelled gas. Rescuers were also searching for two others
who went missing.
At 8:30pm yesterday, two people were
reportedly discovered alive under debris, and rescue workers were trying to
free them using excavators, shovels and their bare hands. It has not been
confirmed whether the two men are the two firefighters who were reported
missing.
Some of the fatalities were homeowners
checking out their properties after being informed about the first blasts.
Two injured people rescued from a fourth-floor
balcony said that they had been propelled to the rooftop by the blasts.
The Chinese-language Apple Daily newspaper’s reporter Wei Bin (魏斌) was injured by the explosions,
receiving second and third-degree burns over about 50 percent of his body, the
paper reported.
Schools and work were called off in
Cianjhen and Lingya districts yesterday.
Hundreds of troops and firefighters from
neighboring Greater Tainan, Chiayi City , Taitung
County and Pingtung County
were deployed to support the rescue effort.
Yesterday morning, fires still burned on
the streets, but the local government said that they were left burning to avoid
further explosions, adding that the firefighting crew was on the scene to keep
the fire from consuming nearby buildings.
The cause of the explosions had not been
determined, with authorities now focusing on the volatile chemical propene —
which is carried in pipelines that run alongside the city’s underground sewage
system in the area — as the suspected cause.
Chemical companies such as CPC Corp, Taiwan
(台灣中油), China
Petrochemical Development Corp (中石化), China General Terminal and Distribution Corp (CGTD, 華運), LCY Chemical Corp (李長榮化學) and Hsin Kao Gas Co Ltd (欣高), which have pipelines in the
area, were called in by the city government’s emergency response center amid
the inquiry into the cause of the fatal blasts.
Minister of Economic Affairs Chang
Chia-juch (張家祝) said
yesterday morning that natural gas has been excluded from the list of possible
causes, adding that gas check valves in the area have been closed.
The Greater Kaohsiung Government said a
4-inch pipeline carrying propene was found to have encountered a pressure
anomaly between 8:40pm and 9pm on Thursday night.
Structure of the lead:
WHO - gas explosion
WHEN - late Thursday night to early yesterday morning
WHAT - A series of suspected gas explosion claimed at least 26 lives and injured 269 people.
WHY - The
volatile chemical propene, which is carried in pipelines that run alongside the
city’s underground sewage system in the area.
WHERE - Kaisyuan 3rd Road and Ersheng 1st Road in Cianjhen District. Later, the explosion took place on Yisin Road, Ersheng Road, Sanduo Road and Guanghua Road in the same district, and in neighboring Lingya District (苓雅).
HOW - Cars and fire trucks were trapped and
overturned in the rubble. Vehicles were hurled through the air, landing on the
roofs of houses.Flames erupted from manholes after their
covers were blasted off, with gouts of fire reaching 15 stories high.
Keywords:
1. suspected (a.) 可疑的
2. shake (v.) 使震驚 ; 使心煩意亂
3. claim (v.) 奪走
4. trench (n.) 溝渠
5. trapped (v.) 被困住的
6. rubble (n.) 碎石 ; 瓦礫
7. hurl (v.) 用力投擲
8. gout (n.) 一團
9. spew (v.) 噴出
10. press time 緊迫時刻
11. debris (n.) 殘骸 ; 碎片
12. excavator (n.) 挖掘機
13. shovel (n.) 鏟子
14. fatality (n.) 死亡
15. propel (v.) 驅使 ; 推動
16. call off 取消
17. crew (n.) 全體人員
18. consume (v.) 毀滅 ; 燒毀
19. volatile (a.) 不穩定的 ; 爆炸性的
20. propene (n.) 丙烯
21. sewage (n.) 下水道 ; 污水
22. valve (n.) 閥門
23. anomaly (n.) 不規則
In my opinion, it was really a tragedy. Several pipelines carried chemical propone that ran alongside the city's underground sewage system in the area exploded, claimed at least 26 lives and many injured. Hoping they can reconstruction soon and back to normal life.
回覆刪除