Taiwan President orders island-wide pipeline check after deadly Kaohsiung explosions
Death toll from string of blasts in Kaohsiung rises to 28 as LCY Chemical system is blamed
Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou yesterday ordered the government to review the safety of underground pipelines and cables across the island amid public concerns about poor management following deadly gas explosions in Kaohsiung on Thursday.
The order came as the government said LCY Chemical, one of the island's key gas suppliers, had never notified the Kaohsiung government about the location of its pipelines, and that propylene, used in the production of plastic and fabrics, had leaked from its network and caused the blasts.
The death toll climbed to 28 yesterday after rescuers found two more bodies as they continued to search for survivors along Kaisyuan Third Road and San Duo Second Road. The number of injured stands at 284.
Watch: Rescue continues after deadly gas explosions in Taiwan's Kaohsiung
The city's Public Works Bureau chief, Yang Ming-jou, said they had no records of LCY's pipelines. "LCY could have laid the pipeline decades ago, before the department was established. According to our records, it did not provide information to the government."