Archive for ‘ambulances’

26/04/2020

Three killed in fire at Taiwan karaoke bar

  • Blaze that also left 50 people needing hospital treatment broke out in bar that covered nine floors on Sunday morning
  • Trapped customers seen climbing onto window sills and calling for help
Firecrews at the scene of the blaze in Taipei. Photo: EPA-EFE
Firecrews at the scene of the blaze in Taipei. Photo: EPA-EFE

At least three people were killed in a fire in Taipei karaoke bar on Sunday morning, which left 50 others in hospital.

Apart from those declared dead, four other people were in a critical condition and were being treated in a local hospital, the official CNA news agency said.

The fire broke out between 10 and 11am on the fifth floor of a 14-storey building on Linsen North Road in the Taiwanese capital. The bar occupied the first nine floors.

Pictures from the scene showed thick smoke emerging from the building.

Customers trapped on the upper floors were seen calling for help with some even standing on window sills in panic.
Customers were rescued from the upper floors. Photo: AFP
Customers were rescued from the upper floors. Photo: AFP
Firefighters used aerial ladders to rescue the trapped people from the upper storey windows. The Taipei city fire department said it dispatched 43 fire engines and 17 ambulances to the scene.

The fire was extinguished at about 11.30am and the search for more survivors was continuing, the department said.

Source: SCMP

19/09/2019

Discover China: New leap forward of China’s oldest auto brand

CHANGCHUN, Sept. 18 (Xinhua) — High emissions, out-of-date passenger cabs, gas-guzzling — heavy-duty trucks often leave a clunky image in people’s minds.

Yet Jiefang, the first auto brand to come from Changchun-based FAW, the cradle of China’s automotive industry, has reversed the stereotype with its latest J7 trucks.

With a streamlined body and a full-vision cab equipped with a one-piece dashboard, the J7 truck provides enough space for both the driver and passengers to walk freely in the compartment.

Since its launch in late November last year, Jiefang J7 trucks have gained a reputation with its European-level performance and reliability and price advantage over imported trucks.

The Chinese truck maker has developed seven generations of truck products in six decades, with a combined production of over 7 million units.

The first home-grown Jiefang truck rolled off the assembly line three years after FAW broke ground on July 15, 1953, in Changchun, capital of northeast China’s Jilin Province. It was the first motor vehicle produced by China.

Jiefang CA10, the first-generation truck, soon became the main force in China’s road transportation and had various civilian variants such as ambulances, refueling trucks, water tankers, dump trucks and lift trucks.

In its 30 years of production until 1986, CA10 trucks set an output record of 1.28 million units, which was almost half of China’s total production during that period.

Industry insiders say Jiefang is like a totem to the Chinese automotive industry and has nurtured many management and engineering talent for the country.

Hu Hanjie, chairman of the FAW Jiefang Automotive Co., Ltd., said independent innovation never stops at Jiefang, which places a high priority on its technological strategy to ensure a market-leading position.

As some domestic truck manufacturers partner with established global brands to grab market share, Jiefang was all alone. However, it held its R&D forces, core technology and time-honored brand tightly in its hands, Hu added.

The company leads the industry in setting a world-class standard warranty of three years with no mileage limit and has amazed its industry peers with an extended oil drain interval as high as 100,000 km for engines, gearboxes and rear axles of its trucks.

Jiefang also developed many customized truck products to suit multiple road and weather conditions across the country and is exploring new frontiers like self-driving and smart logistics. It plans to put self-driving vehicles into commercial operation on expressway by 2023.

“Jiefang has witnessed and made contributions to China’s development and will have a brighter future as the country prospers,” Hu said.

Source: Xinhua

28/04/2019

Driver reverses train for 1 km to save life

The train driver, whose name was not known, reversed the train for about a kilometre so that the injured passenger, who had fallen from the train, could be taken to a nearby hospital for treatment.

INDIA Updated: Apr 28, 2019 12:24 IST

HT Correspondent
HT Correspondent
Hindustan Times, Jaipur
Jaipur,train driver,Suresh Verma

Quick thinking and prompt action by a train driver saved the life of a man on the Kota-bina stretch of Atru-salpura railway line.

The train driver, whose name was not known, reversed the train for about a kilometre so that the injured passenger, who had fallen from the train, could be taken to a nearby hospital for treatment.

The incident took place on the Kota-bina stretch around 4pm on Friday when a 32-year-old man, Rajendra, who was mentally ill, jumped from the train and in order to save Verma, his brother Vinod also jumped from the train.

Giving information about the incident their cousin, Suresh Verma, who was also travelling with them in the train at the time of the incident, said, “My paternal cousin Rajendra Verma works with me in Satna district of Madhya Pradesh (mp) as a labourer. For last five days, his mental condition was not well. On April 24 night, Rajendra was going to Sikar district via Katni town of MP where his health condition deteriorated. So instead of going to Sikar, we (Suresh and his cousins) took train for Jaipur.”

“Next day around 4pm, when train passed Salpura area of Baran district, Rajendra was sleeping on the upper berth of the train. Suddenly, Rajendra got down from the berth and ran towards the gate and jumped from the gate. In order to catch him, his brother Vinod also went behind him and lost balance and fell from the train,” Suresh said.
Senior divisional commercial manager (DCM) of Kota region Vijay Prakash said, “As soon as Rajendra jumped off the train, somebody pulled the chain and the train stopped after crawling a few kilometres. Relatives of Rajendra called for ambulance.”
He added, “As there was no path for ambulance to enter the point where the train had stopped.
“The loco-pilot reversed the train for about one kilometre so that the injured passenger, who fell from the train, could be taken to a nearby hospital for treatment.”
Both the men were taken to Baran hospital where they were given treatment. Both of them are stable, Prakash said.
Source: Hindustan Times
25/04/2019

11 killed, two seriously hurt in lift crash at north China building site

  • Accident happened about 7.20am at residential development in Hengshui, Hebei province, authorities say
  • Injured pair said to be in stable condition in hospital
Eleven people were killed when a lift fell at a construction site in Hengshui, Hebei province. Photo: Weibo
Eleven people were killed when a lift fell at a construction site in Hengshui, Hebei province. Photo: Weibo
Eleven people were killed and two others seriously injured when a lift fell at a construction site in northern China on Thursday morning, municipal authorities said.
The accident happened at about 7.20am on the site of the Jade Huating compound, a residential property development under construction in the Taocheng district of Hengshui, Hebei province, according to a statement issued by the city government.
The two people hurt were being treated at a local hospital and in a stable condition, it said.

Police, work safety officials and construction authorities have begun an investigation to determine the cause of the accident, the statement said.

The accident happened at about 7.20am on the site of the Jade Huating compound. Photo: Weibo
The accident happened at about 7.20am on the site of the Jade Huating compound. Photo: Weibo

A witness was quoted by The Beijing News as saying the crash happened in a matter of seconds.

“I heard a big bang and saw the lift had fallen,” the witness said. “Then six or seven ambulances arrived on the scene.”

Kindergarten flattened by falling debris from building site

The housing project is being developed by Hengshui Youhe Real Estate Development.

The firm said on WeChat earlier this month that the project was making good progress thanks to “reasonable construction with maximum efficiency”, despite work having to be suspended several times for environmental reasons. The post was later deleted.

Source: SCMP

07/03/2019

Pakistan seizes religious schools in intensified crackdown on militants

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) – Pakistan intensified its crackdown against Islamist militants on Thursday, with the government announcing it had taken control of 182 religious schools and detained more than 100 people as part of its push against banned groups.

The move represents Pakistan’s biggest move against banned organisations in years and appears to be targeting Islamic welfare organisations that the United States says are a front for militant activities.

Pakistan is facing pressure from global powers to act against groups carrying out attacks in India, including Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), which claimed responsibility for the Feb. 14 attack that killed at least 40 Indian paramilitary police.

The escalating tension in the wake of the bombing led to a major confrontation between the nuclear-armed rivals, with both countries carrying out aerial bombing missions and even engaging in a brief dogfight that prompted fears of a war.

Pakistani officials say the crackdown is part of a long-planned drive and not a response to Indian anger over what New Delhi calls Islamabad’s failure to rein in militant groups operating on Pakistani soil.

Previous large-scale crackdowns against anti-India militants have broadly been cosmetic, with the proscribed groups able to survive and continue operations.

The interior ministry said law enforcement agencies had placed 121 people in “preventive detention” as part of the crackdown that began this week.

“Provincial governments have taken in their control management and administration of 182 seminaries (madaris)”, the ministry said in a statement, referring to religious schools.

What to do with madrasas is a thorny issue in Pakistan, a deeply conservative Muslim nation where religious schools are often blamed for radicalisation of youngsters but are the only education available to millions of poor children.

The interior ministry said other institutions from different groups had been taken over, including 34 schools or colleges, 163 dispensaries, 184 ambulances, five hospitals and eight offices of banned organisations.
Many banned groups such as JeM run seminaries, which counter-terrorism officials say are used as recruiting grounds for militant outfits
Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD), which operates hospitals and a fleet of ambulances, is estimated to run about 300 madrasas across the country. Pakistan’s government banned the group this week.
JuD calls itself a humanitarian charity but the U.S. State Department has designated it a “foreign terrorist organisation” and calls it a front for Lashkar-e-Taiba (LET), a Pakistan-based group accused of orchestrating attacks in India, including the 2008 Mumbai attack that killed 166 people.
An image casts doubt on India airstrike claims
JuD called the crackdown unfair and said it would seek to counter the government action in courts.
“The whole nation is asking that what message the government wants to send by sealing welfare organisations and kicking students out,” said JuD spokesman Yahya Mujahid.
Pakistan has long used Islamist groups to pursue its aims in the region, but it has denied New Delhi’s accusations it actively supports militants fighting Indian forces in India’s part of Muslim-majority Kashmir.
The South Asian neighbours have fought three wars since independence from Britain in 1947, two of them over Kashmir which they both claim in whole but rule in part.
Source: Reuters
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