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Trial opens of chemical plant accused of poisoning children with lead pollution

Alibis

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Trial opens of Chinese chemical plant accused of poisoning children with lead pollution


Case viewed by activists as a test of government's resolve to tackle human cost of environmental degradation

PUBLISHED : Friday, 12 June, 2015, 2:01pm
UPDATED : Friday, 12 June, 2015, 2:01pm

Reuters in Hengdong

lead.dapu_.reuters.jpg


A file picture of two-year-old Xu Yilin, whose blood, according to her family in Dapu, has been shown to have almost three times the national limit for lead exposure in children. Photo: Reuters

A court in central China on Friday began hearing a closely watched case filed by families who have accused a local chemical plant of being responsible for high levels of lead in the blood of their children and grandchildren.

Lawyers say the case in Hengdong in Hunan province is a test of the central government’s resolve to address the human cost of environmental damage caused by decades of unbridled economic growth in China. It is believed to be the first time a Chinese court is hearing a case involving lead poisoning in a group of children.

The trial comes amid a series of public interest lawsuits filed since a revised environmental protection law that came into effect in January enabled the submission of such cases and increased the penalties for polluters.

Thirteen families from in and around nearby Dapu town have accused Melody Chemical, a chemical plant and metal smelter, of pollution that caused elevated levels of lead in the blood of their children and grandchildren. They are seeking compensation, although the precise amount varies by child.

Melody officials or the company’s lawyer inside the court could not be reached for comment. Previous attempts to reach Melody for comment had been unsuccessful.

Plaintiffs and Dapu residents gathered early at the courthouse in Hengdong, a leafy town where the streets are lined with shops, restaurants and internet cafes.

Of the original 53 families who agreed to participate in the lawsuit, most have dropped out, some because of pressure from local officials. Dapu authorities deny any interference.

“This case will be a useful reference for other families affected by pollution, particularly heavy metals pollution, and give them the confidence and courage to use the law to defend their environmental rights,” said Dai Renhui, the lawyer for the plaintiffs.

Dapu’s lead problem made national headlines a year ago in an expose by state broadcaster CCTV, in which the head of the township was shown saying children might have raised their own lead levels by chewing on pencils.

After the broadcast, which said more than 300 children had high lead levels, officials opened an investigation and Melody was ordered to shut down.

In children, high lead exposure leads to cognitive delays and behavioural problems and can be fatal at extremely high levels. Its effects are permanent and irreversible. Studies have shown that childhood lead exposure is associated with higher adult violent crime rates.

Li Laiyin, a farmer who lives on the edge of an industrial park in Dapu, said he was unable to add his grandchildren to the lawsuit because he had insufficient medical records.

Li Wenjie, eight, and Li Xiongwei, 12, who were diagnosed with high lead in their blood in 2012, can’t sit still at school, Li said.

“The government hasn’t given a thought to the safety of the people who live here,” he added.

Environmental law experts said the court’s acceptance of the lawsuit was a sign of progress, since courts have usually refused to hear controversial pollution-related cases.

President Xi Jinping’s recent focus on the rule of law had also sent a message to courts, lawyers said.

China’s supreme court issued a judicial interpretation on June 1 which reiterated that even if emissions from polluting companies were within legal limits, they could still be liable for any harm caused.

At the same time, China’s environmental problems are decades-old, said Ma Jun, the Beijing-based director of the Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs, a non-governmental organisation.

“These are very deep-rooted problems. There is no silver bullet,” said Ma.


 

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Officials sacked over suicide of four abandoned children who drank pesticide

Local government staff, educators punished over deaths of four children left at home alone, as media debate why they killed themselves

PUBLISHED : Friday, 12 June, 2015, 5:24pm
UPDATED : Friday, 12 June, 2015, 11:41pm

Laura Zhou [email protected]

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The children came from Bijie in Guizhou province. Photo: SCMP Pictures

A number of local officials have been punished in the case of four siblings who killed themselves by drinking pesticide in impoverished Guizhou province.

Three officials, including the education bureau director of Bijie’s Qixingguan district, were suspended for investigation, while two village officials, including its party secretary, were removed from office, the district government said on Friday

Six others, including the principal and a teacher from the primary school where three of the children studied, have been punished, it added.

The decision was announced after Premier Li Keqiang instructed local officials to take the work of government social services seriously to avoid similar tragedies. Any official who failed to fulfil his duties would be held accountable, he said.

The tragedy has renewed concerns on the mainland over migrant workers’ offspring, known as “left-behind children”. Mainland media have argued that parental neglect, rather than dire poverty, was to blame for the siblings’ suicides.

Police investigations showed the four children – a brother and three younger sisters, aged between five and 13 – swallowed pesticide in their three-storey house in Bijie’s Cizu village, the local government said. The four died in hospital.

Investigators found a suicide note penned by the brother, CCTV reported.

“Thank you for being nice to me … I’ve planned this for a long time, and today is the time to leave,” his note read.

The father, identified as Zhang Fangqi, left in March to work in Guangdong, leaving the children unattended although he wired money home periodically, Xinhua previously reported.

The mother, Ren Xifen, left the family last year after she was allegedly beaten by Zhang.

Ren had been contacted, according to the local government, while Zhang wrote on his microblog yesterday that he “was aware of the incident” and would be back home today, the Legal Evening News reported.

Questions have been raised about whether the children took their lives because of their poverty, but villagers and their relatives denied the claims.

Village officials said the father and son had since 2012 been covered by the government’s minimum living security scheme, which gave the family about 1,000 yuan (HK$1,260) every three months. Police also found a debit card in the house with more than 3,500 yuan in the account.

Those who knew the children said they were victims of domestic violence.

A relative said the boy was once so badly beaten by Zhang that his left arm was fractured and right ear was almost ripped off, Xinhuanet.com reported. Ren also once stripped the boy and made him stand under the sun for hours, the relative said.

Villagers said the children rarely interacted with their neighbours.

More than 20 children are estimated to be “left behind” in the village, which has a population of about 2,400, Xinhuanet.com said. The local government said it had launched a survey on all minors in the village, to work towards helping them with their difficulties.


 

kopiOuncle

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irresponsible discharges
irresponsible pollution
irresponsible production and buildings
all pollute the earth
pollute the air
pollute the water
kill people staying nearby
this is the world over

nuclear energy is the ultimate
human is going to perish forever

fukushima is still polluting
and everybody is bathing in the wonderful radiation
 

kopiOuncle

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capitalism
big boys
big factories
big businesses
monopolies
don't care just produce and make money
you die your business
 
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