Waterworks resumes supplies after spill (AFP) Updated: 2006-01-04 10:35 A waterworks in South China has resumed supplies
to tens of thousands of people after being shut down for more than a week
following a dangerous toxic spill, the Beijing Times newspaper reported.
Sun reflects off of a toxic slick on the
surface of a river in northern China, November 2005.
[AFP] | Normal operations were resumed late Sunday at the Nanhua Waterworks, near
Yingde, a city of one million residents in Guangdong province, the report said.
The spill from a state-owned smelting works in Guangdong on December 15 had
threatened water supplies to several cities in the province.
Tens of thousands along the Beijiang river lacked drinking water after the
smelting works released excessive amounts of cadmium, which can cause
neurological disorders and cancer.
Although the resumption at the waterworks was the most important in terms of
cleaning up the river, other smaller cities downstream of Yingde are still at
risk.
The newspaper quoted local officials as saying the reopening of the Nanhua
waterworks was not only good news for Yingde, but could also offer an expample
for downstream cities still threatened by the spill.
The toxic spill was China's second in as many months after a benzene slick
from a factory in northeast China cut tap water to millions of city-dwellers in
November.
The two spills have focused attention on water pollution in a country where
millions still lack safe drinking water and most rivers are polluted by
industrial and human waste.
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