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Doctor Luo Lei checks the situation of a lead poisoning child named Ma Dongsheng at Fengxiang County Hospital, northwest China's Shaanxi Province, Aug. 14, 2009. More than 600 children living in two villages adjacent to Dongling Lead and Zinc Smelting Co. have shown abnormal blood lead levels, local authorities announced Tuesday, with all 166 middle or high level lead poisoning children have been sent to local hospital for free treatment. (Xinhua/Chen Gang) Photo Gallery>>> |
XI'AN, Aug. 14 (Xinhua) -- Authorities in northwest China are working to relocate at least 1,000 people living near a smelting plant suspected of causing lead poisoning in more than 600 people.
The government of Fengxiang County, in Shaanxi
Province, began building new homes Thursday for 425 families living within a
radius of 500 meters of Dongling Lead and Zinc Smelting Co. in Changqing
Township.
The residents are expected to move to the new
community, about a kilometer from their current homes, within two years, said He
Hongnian, deputy county head. Construction costs were not available.
Pu Yiming, chief of Changqing, said the cost would
largely be shared by the county government and local businesses.
"I'm ready to move, the earlier the better, as long
as the new place has water, electricity and easier access to transport," said Lu
Tao, who lives 100 meters from the plant.
Under the relocation plan, initiated before the plant
was opened in 2006, the residents should have moved already. Officials with the
county government said the delay was caused by "readjustments in the overall
planning of the Changqing industrial park."
Residents think the delay may have endangered their
health as 6-year-old Miao Fan was diagnosed with gastritis resulting from lead
ingestion late July.
Miao's case sparked widespread fear among residents,
who rushed their children to hospital for blood tests. The smelting plant was
shut down on Aug. 6.
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A nine years old lead poisoning girl named Lei Xinyue has her lunch at Fengxiang County Hospital, northwest China's Shaanxi Province, Aug. 14, 2009. (Xinhua/Chen Gang) Photo Gallery>>> |
According to government-funded tests carried out by industrial illness specialists at Xi'an Central Hospital this week, 615 children -- about 85 percent of 731 children aged under 14 tested -- had excessive lead levels in their blood.
Of them, 166 children were admitted to hospital as
their blood-lead levels exceeded 250 milligram a liter, compared with the normal
level of zero to 100 mg a liter.
Villager Lei Xiaofei said his nine-year-old daughter
Lei Xinyue was admitted to the county hospital early Friday. "Her blood lead
level was 506 mg a liter, the highest of all the children tested. I really fear
it might do her permanent harm."
Lei's doctor Luo Lei said she needed to spend at
least a week in hospital. "She needs three days of medication and four days of
observation. At the end of the week she will receive another blood test to see
if the treatment has been effective."
Two further severe cases, 12-year-old Ma Yueyue and
seven-year-old Ma Dongsheng were admitted to the same hospital Friday. Their
blood lead levels were 480 mg and 499 mg a liter respectively.
The county government has promised to cover the
children's medical expenses. For those receiving treatment at home, the
government would provide milk, dried vegetables and nuts, which are believed to
help expel excessive lead from the body, said official He Hongnian.
The smelting plant belongs to Dongling Group, one of
the biggest private companies in Shaanxi Province. The plant in Changqing began
operating in 2006, producing lead, zinc and coke. It directly accounted for 17
percent of the county's GDP last year.