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Major train crash causes anger in China
By Carol Divjak
8 May 2008
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Chinas worst rail disaster for more than a decade occurred
in the early morning of April 28, when an express passenger train
travelling from Beijing to the coastal city of Qingdao in Shandong
province, jumped tracks and slammed into an oncoming train. The
accident claimed the lives of at least 72 people. Another 416
were injured, with many in a critical condition.
The last train crash on a similar scale took place in 1997
when 126 people died in Hunan province. Like the industrial accidents
that kill tens of thousands of Chinese workers each year, the
causes of the latest tragedy are rooted in the enormous stresses
produced by Chinas sweatshop economy and the governments
bureaucratic planning.
The accident happened on a bend, while the express train was
travelling at high speed, outside the city of Zibo. Nine carriages
of the T195 train left the rails, toppled over and
landed in a ditch. The other 5034 train, on its way
from Yantai in Shandong to Xuzhou in eastern Jiangsu province,
also derailed after the collision. Local villagers rushed to pull
trapped passengers out, using farm tools to smash train windows.
One passenger on the express train told the official Xinhua
news agency most people were asleep, but some were standing in
the isle waiting to get off at Zibo station. I suddenly
felt the train, like a rollercoaster, topple to one side and then
all the way to the other side. When it finally went off the tracks
many people fell on me.
Chinese authorities quickly imposed strict controls over media
coverage, blocking foreign journalists from speaking to survivors.
Railway officials later revealed that 2,800 passengers were aboard
the two trains. The catastrophe happened just on the eve of the
May Day long weekend, when millions of people were travelling
home to be with families or taking a short break.
The express train was a Tebie or Special
train, capable of running at high speeds. At the time of the crash,
it was clocking 131 kilometres per hour. The Jinan Railway Bureau
had issued an order on the same day for trains to reduce speed
to 80 kilometres per hour in that area due to the construction
of a new rail line running parallel to the existing one. The state-controlled
media reported that the current line, built in 1897, was being
replaced by a high-speed link for the Olympic Games in August,
when Qingdao will host the sailing competition.
Beijing News reported that the instructions to slow
down had not been clearly relayed to the train drivers, nor issued
to staff at a station that the train passed through shortly before
the accident. After the order was issued no one confirmed
that it had been received by the concerned work units, the
newspaper reported.
The government has sacked eight Jinan Railway Bureau officials,
who are likely to be made scapegoats for broader problems. The
Chinese Communist Party (CCP) regime has much at stake in the
Beijing Olympics. It is spending tens of billions of dollars,
both to impress global investors with the countrys business
opportunities, and to make the Olympics a platform for national
pride and patriotism. Local authorities have been under severe
pressure to accomplish their Olympics-related tasks.
According to a British Mail & Guardian article on
April 30, the head of Chinas Administration of Work Safety,
Wang Jun, was investigating whether the construction work on the
new line had destabilised the existing track. At the site of the
crash, workers had dug a hole of more than 20 metres to lay the
foundations for linking up the new line from Jinan. Workers
on the project, many of whom had assisted in pulling injured and
dead passengers from the wreck, refused to comment on whether
their construction work contributed to the tragedy, the
Mail & Guardian reported.
Chinese officials have been anxious to show they can manage
any crisis, with the Olympics just three months away. Zibo city
spokesman Li Chenggang told the media: The country has responded
very quickly to this. The government has wanted to make sure all
the injured are taken care of well and to get the line running
as quickly as possible. The Olympics are coming.
Xinhuas coverage highlighted the militarys role
in the rescue effort. Just 28 hours after the crash, the last
remaining carriage was removed and the 1,000 troops assisting
the operation began returning to their barracks. More than 120
military vehicles had been used to clear the debris and the No.148
hospital of the Peoples Liberation Army (PLA) reportedly treated
85 people and performed surgery on 15.
Much was made of one of four French survivors, who was photographed
receiving fresh flowers and being fed by a smiling nurse. Xinhaus
photo caption said the hospital had allocated special staff to
care for him and cook the Chinese dishes he liked. All four were
later flown, courtesy of the French embassy, to a specialist hospital
in Beijing. The PR campaign is designed to impress foreigners
with Chinas friendliness toward tourists and businessmen.
By contrast, the families of Chinese victims complained of
inadequate compensation. Zhao Judong, a Beijing-based software
salesman whose 37-year-old wife was killed in the crash, told
Reuters by telephone that the families of more than 10 victims
had refused the non-negotiable compensation offer of 200,000 yuan
($US28,620) for each victim. We do not want to ask for too
much, but the officials offered compensation without consultations,
he said. They wont discuss the amount with us.
The primary domestic concern of the Chinese government is that
such disasters will trigger social unrest. According to Reuters,
Chinese Internet users have called for the dismissal of Railways
Minister Liu Zhijun. The latest crash came on top of an accident
in Shandong province in January, when 18 workers were killed.
A train travelling through the night at high speed slammed into
a group of about 100 workers who were carrying out track maintenance
near the city of Anqiu.
Severe snowstorms also caused chaos in the railway system earlier
this year. Tens of millions of internal migrant workers travelling
home for Chinese New Year were stranded for days because of a
massive breakdown. More than 600,000 people were stuck on Guangzhou
station alone due to power failures, which were caused by coal
shortages for power plants.
Migrant workers form the backbone of the new industrial workforce
in the booming coastal provinces. They are also the most frequent
passengers on the railway system. CCP officials are well aware
that deep social tensions can erupt when disasters or railway
chaos occur.
Rapid economic growth has put enormous strain on the rail network.
Last year, Chinas railways carried 1.36 billion passengersthe
worlds second busiest system after India. China will invest
$178.9 billion in railway construction during the current five-year
plan from 2006-2010. But the primary function of the massive
building of infrastructure is to make China an efficient cheap
labour platform for global capital, rather than provide for the
safety and comfort of passengers.
At the same time, the CCP has listed state-run railway corporations
on the Hong Kong share market, following other major state firms,
such as the oil giants, that have made huge gains in market capitalisation.
The net profit of the Chinese railway firms rose 150 percent for
the first quarter of this year. The shareholders will certainly
put more pressure on the party bosses-turned CEOs to do whatever
is necessary, including cutting back safety measures, in order
to make their balance sheets even more attractive to investors.
See Also:
Chinese leaders react nervously
to ongoing "snow havoc"
[8 February 2008]
Snowstorms and blackouts create
chaos in China
[1 February 2008]
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