Schoolmaster detained after carbon monoxide poisoning kills 11 girls in NW China
3/12/2008 17:39
A principal and five other managers at a school in northwestern Shaanxi
Province, where 11 female students died of carbon monoxide poisoning yesterday,
have been detained for investigation. The procuratorate of Dingbian county,
where the school is located, has also begun an investigation to determine
whether managers failed to prevent the accident, said an official with the
county's publicity department, who declined to give his name. Altogether 12
girls, all fourth graders, were poisoned after using a charcoal heater to warm
their dorm room at the Duiziliang School in Yulin City. Eleven died at the
hospital. The sole survivor is still being treated at the Dingbian County
Hospital. A doctor said she was in stable condition. Police believe a quilt
fell on to the stove during the night. It caught fire and then ignited coals
being stored under one of the girl's beds. As the coals smoldered, the students
were poisoned by gases. A teacher, who asked to remain anonymous, told Xinhua
that the dorm room usually held 12 students. Heaters and charcoal were provided
by the school. "The girls are boarding students. Their homes are at least two
kilometers from the school. They have a self-study class in the evening and only
stay at home on weekends," said the teacher. Heart-broken parents of the dead
students gathered at the school to meet with the local government. A
middle-aged man, who only gave his surname Wang, said his 10-year-old daughter
died in the accident. Wang, who worked as a hotel chief in Ordos City of the
neighboring Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, rushed back home yesterday
afternoon after hearing the news. Looking at his daughter's body, Wang could
not believe his girl was gone. He blamed himself for spending little time with
her. "I told myself she just fell into sleep and would wake up later," said
the man through his tears. Soon after the accident, the Ministry of Education
(MOE) ordered boarding schools across the country to conduct safety checks for
carbon monoxide poisoning and fire risks. Night watches in student
dormitories must be strengthened and schools still using coal furnaces are
required to install carbon monoxide alarms as soon as possible or replace the
furnaces with central heating systems, it said. School authorities must also
educate students on how to prevent carbon monoxide poisoning for the students,
the MOE added.
Xinhua
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