More than 500 injured after fire breaks out following explosion in Taiwan water park

June 28, 2015

Taipei, Jun 28: More than 500 people have been injured following an explosion at a water park outside Taiwan's capital Taipei after coloured powder being sprayed onto a crowd ignited.

taiwan blast

Government officials said 516 people had been injured, 194 of them seriously, with more than 400 still in hospital.

"Our initial understanding is this explosion and fire ... was caused by the powder spray. It could have been due to the heat of the lights on the stage," said a spokesman for the New Taipei City fire department.

The injured more than doubled on Sunday after authorities tracked down hundreds of victims who took themselves to hospital, or were taken by others in the crowd.

Four of them are from the Chinese mainland and two are foreigners, health authorities said.

The blast happened as hundreds were reported to have gathered for a colour party at the coastal Formosa Fun Coast water park — a festival of dance and music where revellers are sprayed with clouds of coloured powder.

One male witness told local news channel CTI the fire started on the left side of the stage.

"At the beginning I thought it was part of the special effects of the party but then I realised there was something wrong and people started screaming and running."

One male student who sustained minor injuries described the scene as "hell".

"There was blood everywhere, including in the pool where lots of the injured were soaking themselves for relief from the pain," he told reporters.

His visibly shaken girlfriend added: "I saw lots of people whose skin was gone."

The fire was quickly extinguished, officials said.

Police said event manager Lu Chung-chi and four other event workers had been detained.

"They will be transferred to prosecutors for further investigation on charges of offences against public safety and negligence of duties that caused severe injuries," said New Taipei police spokesman Yen Po-ren.

Inhaled powder caused internal burns

Television images showed the stage on fire and crowds running away some of them only dressed in swimwear and covered in coloured powder.

Trails of bloody footprints leading away from the stage remained in the aftermath of the inferno, a reporter at the scene said.

Media reports said some victims had suffered burns to more than 40 per cent of their bodies.

A doctor treating 41 victims at one hospital in Taipei said 17 of them were "seriously burned".

"They all had respiratory system damage," he said.

Taipei health official Lee Lih-jong said the severely wounded were being treated in intensive care units at 37 different hospitals.

"The reason why the burns were so severe was that in addition to burns to the skin, there were also injuries caused by burns to the respiratory organs from the large amount of colour powder inhaled," he said.

"The next 24 hours will be critical for those severely injured."

Fire agency officials said it had been difficult for ambulances to access the site with many having to be carried away on stretchers.

"We feel sad and regretful about the accident," New Taipei mayor Eric Chu said.

"I've ordered the park to shut down immediately and be placed under a rigorous investigation."

taiwan blast 1

taiwan blast 2

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News Network
May 15,2020

May 15: Global deaths linked to the novel coronavirus passed 300,000 on Thursday, while reported cases of the virus are approaching 4.5 million, according to a news agency tally.

About half of the fatalities have been reported by the United States, the United Kingdom and Italy.

The first death linked to the disease was reported on January 10 in Wuhan, China. It took 91 days for the death toll to pass 100,000 and a further 16 days to reach 200,000, according to the Reuters tally of official reports from governments. It took 19 days to go from 200,000 to 300,000 deaths.

By comparison, an estimated 400,000 people die annually from malaria, one of the world’s most deadly infectious diseases.

The United States had reported more than 85,000 deaths from the new coronavirus, while the United Kingdom and Italy have reported over 30,000 fatalities each.

While the current trajectory of COVID-19 falls far short of the 1918 Spanish flu, which infected an estimated 500 million people, killing at least 10% of patients, public health experts worry the available data is underplaying the true impact of the pandemic.

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News Network
April 9,2020

Paris, Apr 9: More than 1.5 million cases of the novel coronavirus have been registered worldwide, according to a tally compiled by AFP at 0530 GMT Thursday from official sources.

Of the 1,502,478 infections, 87,320 people have died across 192 countries and territories since the epidemic first emerged in China late last year.

The tallies, using data collected by AFP from national authorities and information from the World Health Organization (WHO), probably reflect only a fraction of the actual number of infections. Many countries are only testing the most serious cases.

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News Network
June 2,2020

Oakland, Jun 2: Facebook employees are using Twitter to register their frustration over CEO Mark Zuckerberg's decision to leave up posts by President Donald Trump that suggested protesters in Minneapolis could be shot.

While Twitter demoted and placed a warning on a tweet about the protests that read, in part, that “when the looting starts the shooting starts,” Facebook has let it stand, with Zuckerberg laying out his reasoning in a Facebook post Friday.

“I know many people are upset that we've left the President's posts up, but our position is that we should enable as much expression as possible unless it will cause imminent risk of specific harms or dangers spelled out in clear policies,” Zuckerberg wrote.

Trump's comment evoked the civil-rights era by borrowing a phrase used in 1967 by Miami's police chief to warn of an aggressive police response to unrest in black neighborhoods.

On Monday, Facebook employees staged a virtual “walkout” to protest the company's decision not to touch the Trump posts according to a report in the New York Times, which cited anonymous senior employees at Facebook.

The Times report says “dozens” of Facebook workers “took the day off by logging into Facebook's systems and requesting time off to support protesters across the country." “I work at Facebook and I am not proud of how we're showing up.

The majority of coworkers I've spoken to feel the same way. We are making our voice heard,” tweeted Jason Toff, a director of product management at Facebook who's been at the company for a year.

Toff, who has a verified Twitter account, had 131,400 “likes” and thousands of retweets of his comment. He did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment on Monday.

“I don't know what to do, but I know doing nothing is not acceptable. I'm a FB employee that completely disagrees with Mark's decision to do nothing about Trump's recent posts, which clearly incite violence. I'm not alone inside of FB.

There isn't a neutral position on racism,” tweeted another employee, design manager Jason Stirman.

Stirman did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Monday. Sara Zhang, a product designer at the company, tweeted that Facebook's “decision to not act on posts that incite violence ignores other options to keep our community safe.

The policy pigeon holes us into addressing harmful user-facing content in two ways: keep content up or take it down.” “I believe that this is a self-imposed constraint and implore leadership to revisit the solution,” she continued. Zhang declined to comment to The Associated Press.

Representatives for Facebook did not immediately respond to messages for comment.

Twitter has historically taken stronger stances than its larger rival, including a complete ban on political advertisements that the company announced last November.

That's partly because Facebook, a much larger company with a broader audience,targeted by regulators over its size and power, has more to lose. And partly because the companies' CEOs don't always see eye to eye on their role in society.

Over the weekend, Twitter changed the background and logo if its main Twitter account to black from its usual blue in support of the Black Lives Matter protesters and added a #blacklivesmatter hashtag. Facebook did the same with its own logo on its site, though without the hashtag.

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