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Explosion at fireworks factory in China kills nine

Explosion at fireworks factory in China kills nine

Perth Now21 hours ago

An explosion at a fireworks factory in the southern Chinese province of Hunan has killed nine people and injured 26 others, the state-run Xinhua news agency says.
The blast occurred about 8am on Monday at a factory owned by the Hunan Shanzhou Fireworks Company Ltd in a mountainous area 60km north of the city of Changde.
Videos published by state media showed black and grey smoke rising into the sky as fireworks exploded out of a raging fire while emergency services surveyed the scene.
A team from the ministry of emergency management was also sent to the site, Xinhua said.
The blast comes just weeks after an explosion at a chemical plant in northeastern China that killed at least five people, and highlights the risk in storage of hazardous and flammable chemicals in the world's top manufacturer despite years of crackdown on unsafe practices.
Two massive explosions at warehouses in the port city of Tianjin in 2015 killed more than 170 people and injured 700, prompting the government to overhaul its chemical storage laws.
It took firefighters more than 20 hours to contain Monday's blaze, according to local media.
The governor of Hunan province, Mao Weiming, visited the site on Tuesday and urged local authorities to conduct a thorough investigation into the cause of the explosion and hold those responsible to account, local media reported.
Hunan Shanzhou Fireworks Company, headquartered in Changde, was established in 2017 and employs 95 people, according to company information tracker Qichacha.
It produces the chemicals used for making explosives, detonators and fireworks.

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Explosion at fireworks factory in China kills nine
Explosion at fireworks factory in China kills nine

Perth Now

time21 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Explosion at fireworks factory in China kills nine

An explosion at a fireworks factory in the southern Chinese province of Hunan has killed nine people and injured 26 others, the state-run Xinhua news agency says. The blast occurred about 8am on Monday at a factory owned by the Hunan Shanzhou Fireworks Company Ltd in a mountainous area 60km north of the city of Changde. Videos published by state media showed black and grey smoke rising into the sky as fireworks exploded out of a raging fire while emergency services surveyed the scene. A team from the ministry of emergency management was also sent to the site, Xinhua said. The blast comes just weeks after an explosion at a chemical plant in northeastern China that killed at least five people, and highlights the risk in storage of hazardous and flammable chemicals in the world's top manufacturer despite years of crackdown on unsafe practices. Two massive explosions at warehouses in the port city of Tianjin in 2015 killed more than 170 people and injured 700, prompting the government to overhaul its chemical storage laws. It took firefighters more than 20 hours to contain Monday's blaze, according to local media. The governor of Hunan province, Mao Weiming, visited the site on Tuesday and urged local authorities to conduct a thorough investigation into the cause of the explosion and hold those responsible to account, local media reported. Hunan Shanzhou Fireworks Company, headquartered in Changde, was established in 2017 and employs 95 people, according to company information tracker Qichacha. It produces the chemicals used for making explosives, detonators and fireworks.

Reporter's prison torture cost of political posturing
Reporter's prison torture cost of political posturing

The Advertiser

timea day ago

  • The Advertiser

Reporter's prison torture cost of political posturing

When leaving a Chinese prison after more than three years inside, Cheng Lei was warned by a guard not to write about her experience. The warning turned out to be futile, with the Chinese-Australian broadcaster launching her book, A Memoir of Freedom, to document her time on espionage charges. Lei was the real-life chess piece in a volatile bilateral relationship between Australia and China, with her fate influenced by political posturing. When then-foreign affairs minister Marise Payne called for an independent investigation into the origins of COVID-19 on April 19, 2020, it set in motion a series of events leading to Lei's arrest on trumped-up spying charges. "On April 23, China starts surveilling Australians in China, myself included, (and I only discovered this) a year and a half later," Lei said at her book launch on Tuesday. Breaking an embargo by seven minutes was the crime that exposed Lei to the wrath of Chinese authorities. But it was Australia's deteriorating relationship with China under the coalition government that may have been the determining factor in the severity of her punishment. The journalist, then working for China's state broadcaster, believes she was the victim of a "hostage-taking" due to the fracturing of the relationship between the two countries, immediately understanding the severity of her plight. "Very early on in the piece I understood that, in the words of some of my friends, I was f***ed," Lei said on Tuesday. It was only the change to Anthony Albanese's Labor government in 2022 where she saw an increase in privileges inside detention. Crucially, a meeting between the prime minister and Chinese president Xi Jinping was followed by Lei hearing her children's voices for the first time in years. "After that election in 2022, things began to look brighter - I got one phone call with my kids," she said. Lei initially feared public outcry at home about her detention could lead to further torture and backlash inside the prison run by China's secretive Ministry of State Security. Instead, the now-Sky News presenter says increased publicity led to guards treating her more carefully, "if not better". "Thanks to ordinary Australians, thanks to my media peers that kept my story alive, that public pressure led to more political motivation," she said. Despite her ordeal at the hands of the Chinese state, Lei is certain more reporting on China and its Australian diaspora is critical to understand the nuances of Australia's largest trading partner. "There is this vast gulf of lack of understanding between mainstream Australian society and the diaspora, and China," she said. "I don't think (the Australian media) even run stories about China or Chinese Australians, and that needs to change." When leaving a Chinese prison after more than three years inside, Cheng Lei was warned by a guard not to write about her experience. The warning turned out to be futile, with the Chinese-Australian broadcaster launching her book, A Memoir of Freedom, to document her time on espionage charges. Lei was the real-life chess piece in a volatile bilateral relationship between Australia and China, with her fate influenced by political posturing. When then-foreign affairs minister Marise Payne called for an independent investigation into the origins of COVID-19 on April 19, 2020, it set in motion a series of events leading to Lei's arrest on trumped-up spying charges. "On April 23, China starts surveilling Australians in China, myself included, (and I only discovered this) a year and a half later," Lei said at her book launch on Tuesday. Breaking an embargo by seven minutes was the crime that exposed Lei to the wrath of Chinese authorities. But it was Australia's deteriorating relationship with China under the coalition government that may have been the determining factor in the severity of her punishment. The journalist, then working for China's state broadcaster, believes she was the victim of a "hostage-taking" due to the fracturing of the relationship between the two countries, immediately understanding the severity of her plight. "Very early on in the piece I understood that, in the words of some of my friends, I was f***ed," Lei said on Tuesday. It was only the change to Anthony Albanese's Labor government in 2022 where she saw an increase in privileges inside detention. Crucially, a meeting between the prime minister and Chinese president Xi Jinping was followed by Lei hearing her children's voices for the first time in years. "After that election in 2022, things began to look brighter - I got one phone call with my kids," she said. Lei initially feared public outcry at home about her detention could lead to further torture and backlash inside the prison run by China's secretive Ministry of State Security. Instead, the now-Sky News presenter says increased publicity led to guards treating her more carefully, "if not better". "Thanks to ordinary Australians, thanks to my media peers that kept my story alive, that public pressure led to more political motivation," she said. Despite her ordeal at the hands of the Chinese state, Lei is certain more reporting on China and its Australian diaspora is critical to understand the nuances of Australia's largest trading partner. "There is this vast gulf of lack of understanding between mainstream Australian society and the diaspora, and China," she said. "I don't think (the Australian media) even run stories about China or Chinese Australians, and that needs to change." When leaving a Chinese prison after more than three years inside, Cheng Lei was warned by a guard not to write about her experience. The warning turned out to be futile, with the Chinese-Australian broadcaster launching her book, A Memoir of Freedom, to document her time on espionage charges. Lei was the real-life chess piece in a volatile bilateral relationship between Australia and China, with her fate influenced by political posturing. When then-foreign affairs minister Marise Payne called for an independent investigation into the origins of COVID-19 on April 19, 2020, it set in motion a series of events leading to Lei's arrest on trumped-up spying charges. "On April 23, China starts surveilling Australians in China, myself included, (and I only discovered this) a year and a half later," Lei said at her book launch on Tuesday. Breaking an embargo by seven minutes was the crime that exposed Lei to the wrath of Chinese authorities. But it was Australia's deteriorating relationship with China under the coalition government that may have been the determining factor in the severity of her punishment. The journalist, then working for China's state broadcaster, believes she was the victim of a "hostage-taking" due to the fracturing of the relationship between the two countries, immediately understanding the severity of her plight. "Very early on in the piece I understood that, in the words of some of my friends, I was f***ed," Lei said on Tuesday. It was only the change to Anthony Albanese's Labor government in 2022 where she saw an increase in privileges inside detention. Crucially, a meeting between the prime minister and Chinese president Xi Jinping was followed by Lei hearing her children's voices for the first time in years. "After that election in 2022, things began to look brighter - I got one phone call with my kids," she said. Lei initially feared public outcry at home about her detention could lead to further torture and backlash inside the prison run by China's secretive Ministry of State Security. Instead, the now-Sky News presenter says increased publicity led to guards treating her more carefully, "if not better". "Thanks to ordinary Australians, thanks to my media peers that kept my story alive, that public pressure led to more political motivation," she said. Despite her ordeal at the hands of the Chinese state, Lei is certain more reporting on China and its Australian diaspora is critical to understand the nuances of Australia's largest trading partner. "There is this vast gulf of lack of understanding between mainstream Australian society and the diaspora, and China," she said. "I don't think (the Australian media) even run stories about China or Chinese Australians, and that needs to change." When leaving a Chinese prison after more than three years inside, Cheng Lei was warned by a guard not to write about her experience. The warning turned out to be futile, with the Chinese-Australian broadcaster launching her book, A Memoir of Freedom, to document her time on espionage charges. Lei was the real-life chess piece in a volatile bilateral relationship between Australia and China, with her fate influenced by political posturing. When then-foreign affairs minister Marise Payne called for an independent investigation into the origins of COVID-19 on April 19, 2020, it set in motion a series of events leading to Lei's arrest on trumped-up spying charges. "On April 23, China starts surveilling Australians in China, myself included, (and I only discovered this) a year and a half later," Lei said at her book launch on Tuesday. Breaking an embargo by seven minutes was the crime that exposed Lei to the wrath of Chinese authorities. But it was Australia's deteriorating relationship with China under the coalition government that may have been the determining factor in the severity of her punishment. The journalist, then working for China's state broadcaster, believes she was the victim of a "hostage-taking" due to the fracturing of the relationship between the two countries, immediately understanding the severity of her plight. "Very early on in the piece I understood that, in the words of some of my friends, I was f***ed," Lei said on Tuesday. It was only the change to Anthony Albanese's Labor government in 2022 where she saw an increase in privileges inside detention. Crucially, a meeting between the prime minister and Chinese president Xi Jinping was followed by Lei hearing her children's voices for the first time in years. "After that election in 2022, things began to look brighter - I got one phone call with my kids," she said. Lei initially feared public outcry at home about her detention could lead to further torture and backlash inside the prison run by China's secretive Ministry of State Security. Instead, the now-Sky News presenter says increased publicity led to guards treating her more carefully, "if not better". "Thanks to ordinary Australians, thanks to my media peers that kept my story alive, that public pressure led to more political motivation," she said. Despite her ordeal at the hands of the Chinese state, Lei is certain more reporting on China and its Australian diaspora is critical to understand the nuances of Australia's largest trading partner. "There is this vast gulf of lack of understanding between mainstream Australian society and the diaspora, and China," she said. "I don't think (the Australian media) even run stories about China or Chinese Australians, and that needs to change."

Reporter's prison torture cost of political posturing
Reporter's prison torture cost of political posturing

Perth Now

timea day ago

  • Perth Now

Reporter's prison torture cost of political posturing

When leaving a Chinese prison after more than three years inside, Cheng Lei was warned by a guard not to write about her experience. The warning turned out to be futile, with the Chinese-Australian broadcaster launching her book, A Memoir of Freedom, to document her time on espionage charges. Lei was the real-life chess piece in a volatile bilateral relationship between Australia and China, with her fate influenced by political posturing. When then-foreign affairs minister Marise Payne called for an independent investigation into the origins of COVID-19 on April 19, 2020, it set in motion a series of events leading to Lei's arrest on trumped-up spying charges. "On April 23, China starts surveilling Australians in China, myself included, (and I only discovered this) a year and a half later," Lei said at her book launch on Tuesday. Breaking an embargo by seven minutes was the crime that exposed Lei to the wrath of Chinese authorities. But it was Australia's deteriorating relationship with China under the coalition government that may have been the determining factor in the severity of her punishment. The journalist, then working for China's state broadcaster, believes she was the victim of a "hostage-taking" due to the fracturing of the relationship between the two countries, immediately understanding the severity of her plight. "Very early on in the piece I understood that, in the words of some of my friends, I was f***ed," Lei said on Tuesday. It was only the change to Anthony Albanese's Labor government in 2022 where she saw an increase in privileges inside detention. Crucially, a meeting between the prime minister and Chinese president Xi Jinping was followed by Lei hearing her children's voices for the first time in years. "After that election in 2022, things began to look brighter - I got one phone call with my kids," she said. Lei initially feared public outcry at home about her detention could lead to further torture and backlash inside the prison run by China's secretive Ministry of State Security. Instead, the now-Sky News presenter says increased publicity led to guards treating her more carefully, "if not better". "Thanks to ordinary Australians, thanks to my media peers that kept my story alive, that public pressure led to more political motivation," she said. Despite her ordeal at the hands of the Chinese state, Lei is certain more reporting on China and its Australian diaspora is critical to understand the nuances of Australia's largest trading partner. "There is this vast gulf of lack of understanding between mainstream Australian society and the diaspora, and China," she said. "I don't think (the Australian media) even run stories about China or Chinese Australians, and that needs to change."

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