At least nine people died when a shoe factory collapsed in eastern China, state media reported yesterday, with more than 40 workers hospitalized after being rescued.
A total of 51 workers were in the building in the city of Wenling in Zhejiang Province when it came down on Saturday afternoon, Xinhua news agency reported.
The report added that a total of 42 people were pulled out of the factory and taken to hospitals, but did not give details on their conditions.
Photo: AP
Xinhua said the cause of the collapse was being investigated.
Photographs circulating on Chinese social media showed a man being carried on a stretcher by what appeared to be police officers, while rescuers and other personnel stood on top of the rubble.
Building collapses and other industrial accidents are not uncommon in China, where many structures and facilities are old, safety procedures can be lax and rebuilding has not kept up with the country’s economic growth.
China’s top safety watchdog in May blamed poor construction and weak safety standards for a fire at a nursing home that left 38 people dead.
In April, almost 30,000 people were evacuated after a fire broke out in a Chinese chemical plant which blazed for nearly 50 hours before the flames were finally extinguished.
And in November last year, a fire at a coal mine in northeastern China killed 26 workers, in one of the country’s most incident-prone industries.
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