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China: More Than 1,300 Children Sick In 2nd Lead Poisoning Case

CHRISTOPHER BODEEN   08/19/09 09:53 PM ET   AP

China

CHANGQING, China — Farmer Wang Zhifan jabs a stubby finger toward the sprawling smelter blamed for poisoning hundreds of local children with lead. He bares his yellowed teeth and spits hard.

"That thing is like a nuclear bomb for us," the 61-year-old says in a voice that seems to carry down the steep slope and into the corn fields that run to the smelter's fence. "There's just no saving us."

Local anger boiled over this week with a violent protest at the plant in central Shaanxi province, and tensions remain high in a dispute that demonstrates how environmental degradation caused during the charge for economic growth in China is spawning social unrest.

For decades, many Chinese firms have dumped poisons into rivers and the ground rather than disposing of them safely, counting on the acquiescence of local governments unwilling to damage their economic lifelines.

The resulting problems – from crop losses to cancer – have sometimes prompted violence, but they've also brought a rise in public awareness of environmental safety and health. Since the unrest, the government has promised to close down the Dongling Lead and Zinc Smelting Co. plant in Changqing town until it can be made safe.

That offers at least a temporary victory for the villagers, whose outrage came to a head after some 615 of 731 children in two villages near the plant tested positive earlier this month for lead poisoning. Some had lead levels 10 times that which China considers safe.

On Sunday and Monday, angry residents battled police at the smelter's gates, and stoned trucks delivering coal to the plant.

For now, the plant is closed and security is tight. Associated Press reporters who visited the area on Wednesday were tailed by local government officials, and police officers tried to break up interviews and block access to sick children and their parents.

An apology Monday from Dai Zhengshe, the mayor of Baoji city, which oversees Changqing, seems to have done little to cool villagers' anger. Dai made the promise not to reopen the smelter until it met health standards, according to the official Xinhua News Agency, but villagers said they put little faith in his words.

"You really can't trust what the government tells you," said He Xiaojun, the father of nine-year-old He Haomin, who suffers from nose bleeds and memory problems – common symptoms of lead poisoning. "We want them to move the plant," said He, whose village of Madaokou lies a stone's throw away.

Public distrust has been exacerbated over the years by unmet promises and a lack of government transparency.

Villagers living nearby were supposed to have been given new accommodation even before the smelter opened in 2006, but so far just a few dozen have relocated. Authorities promised to shut the plant on Aug. 6, but villagers – such as Wang, the farmer who likened the plant to a nuclear bomb – insist production continued for days afterward, with smoke coming from the stacks at night.

Officials say that was only to allow time for furnaces to close down without gas explosions. Plans, meanwhile, call for the relocation of all villagers living within 0.6 miles (1 kilometer) of the smelter "as soon as possible," local government spokesman Wang Minmin told The AP.

Official claims that the plant met national standards for ground and surface water, and soil and waste discharge also prompted derision and disbelief from residents, who question how then their children came to have such high lead levels in their blood.

Ma Jun, founder of the non-governmental Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs in Beijing, says that's likely due to outdated standards that don't take into account the cumulative effect of lead and other heavy metals on people and the environment.

"Therefore, even if a given factory had met all the standards on emissions, there would still likely be damage to human health," Ma said.

Lead poisoning can damage the nervous and reproductive systems and cause high blood pressure, anemia and memory loss. It is especially harmful to young children, pregnant women and fetuses, with damage that is usually irreversible, according to the World Health Organization.

On Wednesday at the local Fengxiang County Hospital, about 80 children had been admitted for observation and treatment. They lay on beds, many of them on IV drips, with their parents hovering nearby.

Zha Xiaofang, 41, from Madaokou village, said her 8-year-old daughter has lead levels considered mid- to high-level poisoning. Her daughter has had abdominal pain and memory problems for some time.

"We are anxious because we don't know what will happen next and we don't have any guarantees for the future," she said.

Changqing, about 850 miles (1,380 kilometers) west of Beijing, is just one of scores of places in China where pollution and chemical contamination have sparked opposition and protests, embarrassing the ruling Communist Party and its pledges to pursue clean and sustainable development.

In Wenping township in central Hunan province, angry villagers blocked roads on July 30 after the government refused to close down a manganese processing plant. But last Thursday, the local government announced that it was shutting down the factory because it was operating illegally and had discharged lead excessively. As in Changqing, local officials offered free lead testing for all children under the age of 14 within three miles (five kilometers) of the factory.

Plans for chemical plants and garbage incinerators in urban areas have also drawn protests including marches and petitions – rare in a country where even peaceful dissenters are often punished.

Yet dubious projects continue to receive approval, due in large part to their contribution to local tax bases and employment. According to 2008 media reports, Changqing's Dongling smelter accounted for 17 percent of the county government's revenue and supported more than 2,000 households.

A government stimulus plan is also expediting projects, sometimes shortening their environmental approval times, while a tough government opponent of polluters, vice director of State Environmental Protection Agency, Pan Yue, has recently been sidelined for reasons that are unclear.

Given the lack of trust, greater transparency about major polluting projects was perhaps the only way to head-off future conflicts, said Hu Yuanqiong, a staff attorney with the U.S. Natural Resources Defense Council's China Program.

"The best way to ensure social stability and the sustainability of the economy is to make information open and allow public participation in monitoring emissions and to have a mechanism between the public and the factories to talk things out and resolve disputes," Hu said.

(This version CORRECTS spelling of plant to Dongling sted Dangling in graf 5)

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CHANGQING, China — Farmer Wang Zhifan jabs a stubby finger toward the sprawling smelter blamed for poisoning hundreds of local children with lead. He bares his yellowed teeth and spits hard. "T...
CHANGQING, China — Farmer Wang Zhifan jabs a stubby finger toward the sprawling smelter blamed for poisoning hundreds of local children with lead. He bares his yellowed teeth and spits hard. "T...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
COPerez
11:46 AM on 08/20/2009
Sounds like the "free market" utopia that conservatives want right here...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AMaitrejean
There Is No Planet B
11:41 AM on 08/20/2009
You folks skip on over to the Green section here on HP and read about all the mercury contaminated fish right here is the good ol' USA. Pollution like this is WORLDWIDE....and ALL for the sake of a DOLLAR.
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12:10 PM on 08/20/2009
no kidding, i saw fresh caught mackrel at the store the other day i wanted it so bad but i know its full of lead. so i moved onto less polluted fish. i wonder where we can get a list of the toxic levels of fish so we know what to buy and what not too.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AMaitrejean
There Is No Planet B
12:57 PM on 08/20/2009
Well, I think it would depend on the waters of origin of the fish. Also, would the vendors reveal this information? Remember....we're talking MONEY here...usually ethics go out the window for fear of losing a sale. I think for the general public the rule of thumb is: consume fish at your own risk!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Ohioan730
11:23 AM on 08/20/2009
About 10 years ago, I lived in a rented house in which the slumlord hadn't bothered to remove all the lead based paint. My daughter and my nephew were tested with small levels of lead poisoning in their systems and immediately, the doctors and social services contacted the city health dept. and the landlord and forced him to remodel the whole building at his own expense. Construction started within a week. Gotta love America for things like that.

Who in the world still has paint from the 70s in their house? A lazy, good-for-nothing human life endangering profiteer, that's who.

China, you'd better get your stuff together.
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12:12 PM on 08/20/2009
oy! if lead paint is covered with other paints it poses no threat.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Ohioan730
11:16 AM on 08/20/2009
Another reason for me to boycott anything made in China. If they don't care about their own citizens, they cant be trusted to make any products for me. I hope all the greedy American-job-snatching-corporations are pleased with themselves for dealing with this country that lets school buildings collapse on children. My only consolation is that the people of China don't seem afraid to organize and strike back. I hope they overthrow and revolt against that indifferent government and it actually sticks one day.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chedet
Le Panda
05:26 AM on 08/21/2009
But the thing is sometimes the US corporations know about the problems, only they wouldn't act on it until something happens. After all they are the ones that gives the specifications to the chinese for them to manufacture. All for the quest of cheapness.
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JoeBlough
The Horror. . .The Horror. . .
11:12 AM on 08/20/2009
Bush says the science isn't all in yet.
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tailgateshirts
09:45 AM on 08/20/2009
at least its not our children this time. maybe now that their avg citizen has money to buy their stuff, they will start to care about what they put in their products... novel idea
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hoper01
03:20 PM on 08/20/2009
Wow! "not our children this time," what a statement! I guess calamity looks good on someone else. Totally American and repugnant!
09:23 AM on 08/20/2009
"You really can't trust what the government tells you," said He Xiaojun, the father of nine-year-old He Haomin, who suffers from nose bleeds and memory problems – common symptoms of lead poisoning.

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