Tuesday, 10 February 2009

CCTV blamed for fire


The blaze engulfed a nearly completed 30-storey cultural centre that was to house the Mandarin Oriental's flagship China hotel

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Guanyu said...

CCTV blamed for fire

AFP
10 February 2009

BEIJING - Investigators on Tuesday blamed China’s state TV station for a huge blaze at its futuristic new headquarters, saying fireworks it illegally set off to celebrate the Lunar New Year caused the fire.

The debacle left one firefighter dead and prompted an extraordinary apology from CCTV, one of the ruling Communist Party’s most powerful propaganda arms that had been looking forward to opening its new base in October.

‘CCTV is deeply sorry that the fire caused severe losses to state property,’ said a statement on its website that nevertheless did not admit direct responsibility for the blaze. ‘CCTV sincerely apologises to people who live nearby for the inconvenience and for the traffic jams (caused by the fire)’.

The blaze engulfed a nearly completed 30-storey cultural centre that was to house the Mandarin Oriental’s flagship China hotel, as well as a television studio and an IT centre. It stood just 200 hundred metres from the CCTV tower that had already won fame ahead of its opening as one of Beijing’s most stunning buildings and a striking symbol of China’s new-found global power.

Both buildings were designed by renowned Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas’ Office of Metropolitan Architecture and were due to open this year.

The firefighter, a 30-year-old man, died after inhaling toxic fumes while battling the fire that began on Monday night and raged for more than five hours, officials said. Seven other people were injured, but the Mandarin Oriental said no one was in the hotel when the fire started.

City government officials said the exterior of the cultural centre and hotel had been severely damaged, while the external walls of the 234-metre CCTV tower were burnt but its structure was not harmed.

CCTV gave no indication on Tuesday on whether the fire would push back the scheduled October opening. In a public relations disaster for CCTV, authorities said the station defied police warnings and set off powerful fireworks in the complex.

‘The owner caused the fire because it violated regulations and set off fireworks at the construction site,’ Zhu Xu, a spokesman with the Beijing government, told AFP. CCTV staff recorded the fireworks show, which involved pyrotechnics far stronger than the public was allowed to use, the official Xinhua news agency quoted Beijing Fire Control Bureau Luo Yuan as saying.

‘Owners of the property ignored policemen’s warnings that such fireworks were not allowed,’ he said, according to Xinhua. He said the people who set off the fireworks were being detained for questioning.

Fireworks had erupted right across Beijing on Monday night to celebrate the Lantern Festival that marks the official end of the Lunar New Year celebrations. Letting off fireworks on Lunar New Year’s Eve, which fell on January 25 this year, and throughout the festive period is a long-held Chinese tradition based on the belief that the noise will ward off evil spirits and ghosts.

But it is also a notoriously dangerous practice, and was as such banned in Beijing between 1994 and 2005.

The Mandarin Oriental’s website said the 241-room hotel was to be the group’s flagship property in China and one of Beijing’s most luxurious hotels. However its statement about the fire said it did not own the building, and was only contracted to run the hotel.