Dozens of officials in China’s southern Guangdong province have been punished over a highway collapse last year – the country’s deadliest such incident in over a decade.
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At least 52 people were killed and 30 others injured when a section of the Meizhou-Dabu highway in Guangdong collapsed on May 1 after weeks of downpours. Around 18 metres (59 feet) of a mountainous stretch of the highway in Meizhou city crumbled into the forested slope below, along with dozens of vehicles holding mostly holidaymakers.
Four government offices and 32 officials have been held accountable for the accident, according to a provincial government report released on Thursday.
Most of the punished officials – from deputy department directors to division heads – were either demoted, warned and placed under observation for a year, or ordered to submit a written apology, the report said.
Guangdong’s provincial transport department, its road affairs centre, Communications Corp – a state-owned enterprise involved in highway building and operation, and the Meizhou transport bureau were all ordered to issue written apologies.
Meanwhile, the former deputy director of the road affairs centre, Wang Xiaotian, has been placed under investigation by the Guangdong branch of China’s top anti-corruption watchdog, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection.