Families of dead contract firefighters row with Tianjin government over warehouse blast compensation
An ugly row has broken out over compensation for firemen killed in last month’s deadly Tianjin blasts as the city unveiled plans to build an ecological park, including a memorial to the men who gave their lives as they tried to put out the raging fires.
Family members of some of the dead firefighters, employed as contract staff by the company managing the port, said the government had failed to honour them and to compensate them equally with dead firemen who worked for the government.
Two huge blasts at a warehouse storing hazardous chemicals in Tianjin’s port area on August 12 killed 161 people, including 96 firefighters, 11 policemen and 54 civilians. As of Wednesday, 12 people are still missing and nearly 300 injured people remain in hospital.
Authorities in the Binhai New Area said they planned build a 824-hectare park on the blast site, where workers are still cleaning up toxic chemicals and damaged containers.
Sculptures would be erected to “commemorate and praise the firefighters who died heroic deaths, Tianjin Daily reported.
Construction of the park will start in November and is due to finish next July.
WATCH: Aerial view of the fires caused by the explosion in Tianjin