Rules Ignored, Toxic Sludge Sinks Chinese Village

| | Comments (0)

By Jim Yardley | The New York Times
04 September 2006

URAD QIANQI, China — Dark as soy sauce, perfumed with a chemical stench, the liquid waste from two paper mills overwhelmed the tiny village of Sugai. Villagers tried to construct a makeshift dike, but the toxic water swept it away. Fifty-seven homes sank into a black, polluted lake.

The April 10 industrial spill, described by five residents of the village in Inner Mongolia, was a small-scale environmental disaster in a country with too many of them. But Sugai should have been different. The two mills had already been sued in a major case, fined and ordered to upgrade their pollution equipment after a serious spill into the Yellow River in 2004.

The official response to that spill, praised by the state-run news media, seemed to showcase a new, tougher approach toward pollution — until the later spill at Sugai revealed that local officials had never carried out the cleanup orders. Now, the destruction of Sugai is a lesson in the difficulty of enforcing environmental rules in China.

>> Read the complete article

This article is filed under the categories of

Have something to say? Leave a comment here:


please type the characters you see in the picture above.

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Site Editor published on September 6, 2006 7:12 PM.

Times Employee in China to Appeal Conviction was the previous entry in this blog.

Dalai Lama Proud to Be Honorary Canadian is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.




Beijing 2008
Silenced - China's Great Wall of Censorship. This book takes the reader on a fascinating and disturbing trip behind China’s Great Wall of Censorship. It also tells the story of Voice of Tibet, the radio station China couldn’t silence.

Powered by Movable Type 4.0