NANNING, Oct. 8 (Xinhua) -- A local government official said on Wednesday
that 136 villagers were in stable condition after drinking water contaminated by
arsenic in south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.
"All those sickened are in stable condition," said Wei Kaizhong, health
bureau director of Hechi City. "Residents in the affected villages have now
access to safe drinking water."
The city government is expanding the search for other possible victims.
Residents of two villages in Hechi began to show symptoms of swelling to
the face and eyes, vomiting and blurred eyesight on Friday.
Medical tests found excessive amounts of arsenic in 136 people's urine
samples, said Ge Xianmin, head of Guangxi regional occupational disease
prevention and control institute.
"The villagers were slightly poisoned. They can be cured in 9 to 15 days
under timely treatment," Ge said.
Environmental monitoring measures indicated the water source of the
villagers was polluted by industrial waste from a nearby metallurgy enterprise.
The city authorities said Typhoon Hagupit triggered torrential rain on
Sept. 25. The waste water containing arsenic overflew from the unnamed firm and
polluted nearby ponds and underground water.
Investigation into the poisoning is still underway.
136 villagers poisoned by contaminated water in S China
NANNING, Oct. 7 (Xinhua) -- Contaminated drinking water has poisoned 136 villagers in south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, the local government said on Tuesday based on an initial investigation.
Residents of two villages in Hechi City began to show symptoms of swelling to the face and eyes, vomiting and blurred eyesight as of Friday, according to the city government. Full story