A total of 16 people were killed in a chemical plant blast in East China's 
Anhui Province on Friday. 
 
 
   Local 
 firefighters clear the site on June 17, 2006, after a Friday blast occured 
 in the chemical plant in east China's Anhui Province. The two-story 
 workshop complex has been razed to the 
 ground. [sina] | 
Ten bodies were 
identified as workers, but the other six were burnt beyond recognition. 
The explosion at the Dun'an chemical plant in Dangtu County also injured 24 
workers, who are now receiving treatment in local hospitals. 
Three of the injured workers are still in critical condition, the Anhui Daily 
reported. 
According to an initial investigation, the blast occurred on Friday afternoon 
at a workshop during powder mixing. The plant produces explosives for mining. 
The Dun'an chemical plant, owned by a corporation from East China's Zhejiang 
Province, has a production capacity of over 20,000 tons of explosives each year. 
It is thought that there were at least 4 tons of explosives in the workshop 
when the explosion happened. 
Clean-up work at the site has been completed, but the workshop was razed to 
the ground. 
Rescuers said that their work was difficult because there were combustible 
materials in the plant that might have caused further blasts. 
Vice-governor of Anhui Province Huang Haisong headed a team to supervise 
rescue work at the scene. 
Officials with the State Administration of Work Safety and the Commission of 
Science Technology and Industry for National Defence also rushed to the site for 
investigation. 
Local governments are now dealing with compensating the injured and family 
members of the dead. 
Experts with the Anhui Provincial Public Security Department said they were 
working to identify the remaining dead. 
The Anhui provincial government convened an urgent telephone conference 
Friday evening, urging local companies to conduct a work safety check 
immediately. 
Since the beginning of May, a series of safety accidents have killed 37 
people in the province, including the 16 on Friday. 
The first accident occurred on May 13 in Anqing, when three miners were 
killed in an accident in an unlicensed coal mine. 
Embarrassingly, May 13 is designated as "Safe Production Day" in the 
province, following a coal mine explosion in 2003 that killed 86 people. 
Five days later, three workers were killed at a stone workshop in Huainan 
following a blast. 
On May 27, a landslide at a quarry in Wuwei County killed six. 
(China Daily 06/19/2006 page2)