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Tianjin: Death toll rises to 50 and scores still critically injured after huge explosion

'Our building is shaking. Is this an atomic bomb?'

Adam Withnall
Thursday 13 August 2015 07:40 EDT
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Cars burning during the blaze in Tianjin
Cars burning during the blaze in Tianjin (Reuters)

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A series of huge explosions have rocked the Chinese port city of Tianjin, killing at least 50 people including at least a dozen fire fighters.

City officials said the death toll rose on Thursday afternoon, adding that more 700 people were injured in the blast. According to Chinese news agency Xinhua, 71 of those were in a critical condition.

Images and video from the blast site showed a plume of fire rising up to 100m into the air, with local residents saying it felt like there had been an "earthquake" or "an atomic bomb".

The incident began with reports of a fire at a warehouse filled with "dangerous" chemicals in the densely-populated city.

With large numbers of firefighters already on the scene, the site erupted in explosions. China's earthquakes centre said the first blast had the power of three tonnes of TNT, and a second was equal to 21 tonnes.

More than 1,000 firefighters and 140 fire engines continued to battle to bring at least four distinct fires under control on Thursday morning, Xinhua reported.

More photos of the massive explosion in Tianjin #China right now pic.twitter.com/UMEqO6hSGu

— Gissur Simonarson (@GissiSim) August 12, 2015

Hundreds of people have reportedly been injured & many have been evacuated #explosion #China http://t.co/k8I7IhYBQ4 pic.twitter.com/Lh0ywmvdEF

— Paul Henry (@PaulHenryShow) August 12, 2015

Tianjin is the 10th largest port in the world, and the city has more than 14 million residents. Locals reported shockwaves that shattered glass more than two kilometres away, while the blast itself was seen by satellites from space. Even the US Geological Survey registed the event as seismic.

"I was sleeping when our windows and doors suddenly shook as we heard explosions outside. I first thought it was an earthquake," Guan Xiang, who lives 7 km (4 miles) away from the explosion site, told Reuters by telephone.

This mobile phone picture shows people on the street in the aftermath of the explosion
This mobile phone picture shows people on the street in the aftermath of the explosion (AFP/Getty)
Burned-out cars lined the streets of Tianjin
Burned-out cars lined the streets of Tianjin (Reuters)

Video posted on YouTube from what appeared to be an apartment building some distance from the scene showed an initial blast followed by a second, much bigger, explosion. Shockwaves hit the building seconds later.

"Our building is shaking. Is this an atomic bomb?" said a frenzied voice inside.

Local authorities said police have now arrested the head of the company involved, Tianjin Dongjiang Port Rui Hai International Logistics.

The company's website said it was approved by the government to handle "dangerous goods" including butanone, an explosive industrial solvent, sodium cyanide and compressed natural gas.

The government said that despite the destruction, the port itself was operating normally.

Additional reporting by agencies

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